Authors
Qi Xia, Qinghai Li, Chao Ding, Jun Wang
Published in
Frontiers in oncology. Volume 16. Pages 1842330. Epub Jun 26, 2026.
Abstract
Primary small-bowel tumors are uncommon and frequently present with non-specific symptoms. Timely and accurate diagnosis relies on a range of radiologic and endoscopy-based modalities, yet their comparative diagnostic performance remains uncertain.
We performed a systematic review and diagnostic test accuracy meta-analysis. PubMed, Embase, CNKI, and Wanfang databases were searched from inception to August 31, 2025, and the reference lists of included studies and relevant reviews were hand-searched. Two reviewers independently screened studies, extracted data, and assessed the risk of bias using the QUADAS-2 tool. To avoid unit-of-analysis errors, the primary analysis used a de-duplicated dataset with one representative arm per study cohort according to a prespecified hierarchy: the primary or original/consensus reading reported by the source article, then the arm with the largest analyzable 2×2 denominator, and finally the estimate closest to the within-study median diagnostic odds ratio if ties remained. Pooled sensitivity and specificity were estimated using hierarchical bivariate random-effects models, while alternative arms were retained for sensitivity analyses.
Twenty-one studies met the eligibility criteria and were included in the quantitative synthesis. The overall pooled sensitivity was 0.91 (95% CI: 0.87-0.93) and specificity was 0.88 (95% CI: 0.78-0.94), with an area under the summary receiver operating characteristic curve of 0.95 (95% CI: 0.93-0.97). Between-study heterogeneity was substantial. In modality-stratified analyses, dedicated enterography techniques (magnetic resonance enterography and computed tomography enterography) demonstrated the highest comprehensive diagnostic accuracy, outperforming conventional contrast-enhanced CT and functional imaging.
Contemporary imaging modalities exhibit high overall diagnostic performance for primary small-bowel tumors. Enterography-based cross-sectional imaging yielded the most favorable point estimates, although confidence intervals overlapped with those of conventional CT. These findings support CTE and MRE as strong diagnostic options within a multimodality pathway rather than proving clear statistical superiority.
https://www.crd.york.ac.uk/PROSPERO/, identifier CRD420251144585.
PMID:
42434747
Bibliographic data and abstract were imported from PubMed on 11 Jul 2026.
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