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1.
Purpose This study was designed to retrospectively evaluate the diagnostic yield of FDG PET for the diagnosis of recurrent ovarian cancer. Methods Eighty FDG PET scans were performed on 55 patients owing to suspicion of relapse, and 45 FDG PET scans were performed on 31 patients who were clinically disease free. PET results were compared with the results of conventional radiological imaging (CIM) and serum CA 125 levels, and related to pathological findings in 54 cases or clinical follow-up in 71 cases. Results CIM correctly identified 49 cases with recurrence [sensitivity (SE) 53.3%] ,and there were 27 true negatives [specificity (SP) 81.8%] However, 43 cases were false negative and six were false positive. The positive predictive value (PPV), negative predictive value (NPV) and accuracy (ACC) of CIM were 89%, 38.6% and 60.8%, respectively. FDG PET correctly detected recurrent disease in 80/92 cases (SE 86.9%, p < 0.05) and ruled out relapse in 26/33 cases (SP = 78.8%). The PPV, NPV and ACC of PET were 91.9%, 68.4% and 84.8%, respectively. Standardised uptake values did not provide additional diagnostic accuracy compared with visual analysis. The CA 125 results showed an SE of 57.6%, an SP of 93.9% and an ACC of 67.2%. In 23 patients with positive serum CA 125 levels, but negative CIM, FDG PET was positive and relapse was confirmed. Furthermore, FDG PET was positive and relapse was confirmed in 11 patients with negative serum CA 125 levels and CIM. Conclusion FDG PET may detect recurrent ovarian cancer earlier than CIM, with higher sensitivity and even higher diagnostic accuracy.  相似文献   

2.
Purpose To evaluate the accuracy of integrated positron emission tomography (PET) and computed tomography (CT) for depiction of suspected recurrent ovarian carcinoma after treatment, with use of clinical or histological findings as the reference standard. Methods Seventy-seven women (median age, 51 years) with ovarian carcinoma treated with primary cytoreductive surgery followed by platinum-based combination chemotherapy were included, and [18F]fluorodeoxyglucose (FDG) PET/CT was performed for suspected recurrence. In all patients, imaging findings were compared with results of histological examination after surgical exploration or clinical follow-up to determine the diagnostic accuracy of PET/CT in the evaluation of disease status. Fisher’s exact test was used to measure the ability of PET/CT to predict recurrent lesions. Results Forty-five (58.4%) of the 77 patients had documented recurrence during surgical exploration or clinical follow-up, while 32 (41.6%) had no evidence of recurrent tumour. Of the 45 patients with recurrent disease, 27 (60%) were confirmed to have recurrence by surgical biopsy. A correlation was found between PET/CT and histological or clinical analyses (κ = 0.894). The overall sensitivity, specificity, accuracy, positive predictive value and negative predictive value of PET/CT were 93.3%, 96.9%, 94.8%, 97.7% and 91.2%, respectively. PET/CT modified the diagnostic or treatment plan in 19 (24.7%) patients, by leading to the use of previously unplanned therapeutic procedures in 11 (57.9%) patients and the avoidance of previously planned diagnostic procedures in eight (42.1%) patients. Conclusion Integrated FDG PET/CT is a sensitive post-therapy surveillance modality for the detection of recurrent ovarian cancer; it aids decisions on treatment plans and may ultimately have a favourable impact on prognosis.  相似文献   

3.
Purpose The purpose of this study was to assess the comparative benefits and limitations of 18F-fluorodeoxyglucose (FDG) PET and CT-MRI in documented or suspected recurrence of cervical cancer after primary treatment. Methods Three patient groups were enrolled. Group A patients had biopsy-documented recurrent or persistent cervical cancer. Group B patients had suspicion of recurrent tumour on CT-MRI without biopsy proof and were potentially curable. Group C patients were in complete remission after previous definitive treatment for histologically confirmed cervical carcinoma but had elevated serum squamous cell carcinoma antigen (tumour marker) levels despite negative CT-MRI. Clinical management decisions were recorded with CT-MRI alone and with additional FDG PET. Discordances and concordances between CT-MRI and FDG PET results were identified and related to final diagnosis as based on histopathology or follow-up. Results A total of 150 patients (ten regions per patient) were eligible for analysis, with 58 in group A, 52 in group B and 40 in group C. For the 149 discordant regions, 126 (84.6%) had final diagnoses. Of these final diagnoses, there was additional benefit from FDG PET over CT-MRI in 73.8% (93/126), with FDG PET correcting false negatives (FNs) on CT-MRI in 74.2% (69/93) and correcting false positives (FPs) on CT-MRI in 25.8% (24/93). Among lesions confirmed by FDG PET, 75.4% (52/69) were extra-pelvic. There was additional benefit of CT-MRI compared with FDG PET in 26.2% (33/126): in nine (27.3%) CT-MRI results were shown to be true positive (TP) whereas FDG PET yielded FN results, while in 24 (72.7%) CT-MRI corrected FP results on FDG PET. Among the nine FNs on FDG PET that were identified by CT-MRI, four were extra-pelvic. Among the FPs on FDG PET that were excluded by CT-MRI, 79.2% (19/24) were extra-pelvic. Conclusion For recurrent cervical cancer, the benefits of FDG PET exceed those of CT-MRI owing to the ability of FDG PET to identify extra-pelvic metastases and its higher sensitivity and specificity.  相似文献   

4.
 目的 探讨18F-氟脱氧葡萄糖正电子发射断层显像(18F-FDG PET)在妇科恶性肿瘤治疗随访中的作用.方法 21例均经病理证实的妇科恶性肿瘤患者治疗后行18F-FDG PET检查.结果 21例中17例发现有残余或转移病灶,占80.9%,无假阳性病例;4例阴性显像患者中,3例提示未见明确复发和转移,1例为假阴性,为近期行化疗所致.FDG-PET对本组妇科肿瘤治疗后的复发或转移诊断的灵敏度、特异性和准确性分别为94.4%、100%和95.2%.结论 18F-FDG PET 对妇科恶性肿瘤治疗随访中有重要作用.  相似文献   

5.

Purpose

To estimate the accuracy of 18FDG PET/CT in detection of recurrent cancer ovary and to describe the localization of metastases for restaging.

Materials and methods

44 female patients with suspicion of ovarian cancer recurrence underwent a PET/CT scan from September 2013 to August 2015.

Results

CA-125 levels were elevated in 36 patients, 25 patients presented with alterations on imaging and 18 patients had clinical suspicion of recurrence. Imaging examinations were normal in 10/36 patients with elevated CA-125. 18FDG PET/CT scan was positive in 39/44 patients, and it was negative in 5/44 patients, 4/5 patients continued to be disease free all over the follow-up (true negative), while PET-CT missed recurrence in 1/5 patient (false negative). 1/39 patient was false positive. Sensitivity, specificity, positive predictive value, negative predictive value and diagnostic accuracy of integrated PET/CT were calculated to be 91%, 76%, 96%, 50% and 87%.

Conclusion

18FDG PET/CT is an accurate modality for detection of recurrence of ovarian cancer. The accuracy of PET–CT in precise localization of suspicious FDG uptake can lead to proper assessment of disease recurrence, thus allow for restaging of the disease and subsequently optimizing treatment plan for these patients.  相似文献   

6.
PURPOSE: The purpose of this study was to evaluate the accuracy of integrated positron emission tomography (PET) and computed tomography (CT) for the identification of suspected recurrent endometrial cancer after treatment. METHODS: Thirty-one women (median age, 53 years) with endometrial cancer treated by primary staging laparotomy who had [(18)F]fluorodeoxyglucose (FDG) PET/CT performed for suspected recurrence were retrospectively reviewed. The findings of the PET/CT scans were compared, with the histological examination after a surgical biopsy in 20 cases and with clinical follow-up in 11 cases to determine the diagnostic accuracy of PET/CT. RESULTS: Twelve (38.7%) of the 31 patients had a documented recurrence by surgical biopsy or clinical follow-up, and 19 (61.3%) had no evidence of recurrence. Of the 12 patients with recurrent disease, nine (75.0%) women were confirmed to have a recurrence by surgical biopsy. A close correlation was found between the PET/CT and histological or clinical analyses (kappa = 0.933, p < 0.001). The overall sensitivity, specificity, accuracy, positive predictive value, negative predictive value, and accuracy of PET/CT were 100, 94.7, 92.3, 100, and 96.8%, respectively. The PET/CT results modified the diagnostic or treatment plan in seven (22.6%) patients, resulting in five (16.1%) patients undergoing previously unplanned therapeutic procedures and eliminating previously planned diagnostic procedures in two (6.5%) patients. Patients with negative PET/CT scans showed significantly better progression-free survival than those with positive scans (p = 0.015). CONCLUSION: Integrated PET/CT appears to be highly sensitive, specific, and accurate as a post-therapy surveillance modality for endometrial cancer in well-selected patients. The PET/CT might be used to improve patient surveillance and prognosis.  相似文献   

7.
18F-Fluoro-2-deoxy-D-glucose positron emission tomography (FDG PET) has been evaluated in breast cancer for the characterisation of primary tumours, lymph node staging and the follow-up of patients after surgery, chemotherapy and/or external radiotherapy. In contrast to both the low sensitivity and moderate specificity of FDG PET in the initial detection and characterisation of breast cancer and the low lesion-based sensitivity for lymph node staging, the results from use of FDG PET in re-staging breast cancer patients are very promising. A major advantage of FDG PET imaging compared with conventional imaging is that it screens the entire patient for local recurrence, lymph node metastases and distant metastases during a single whole-body examination using a single injection of activity, with a reported average sensitivity and specificity of 96% and 77%, respectively. In most studies the sensitivity of FDG PET is higher than that of a combination of conventional imaging methods. Limitations of FDG PET in the follow-up of breast cancer patients include the relatively low detection rate of bone metastases, especially in case of the sclerotic subtype, and the relatively high rate of false positive results. The rather low specificity of FDG PET can be improved/increased by utilising combined anatomical-molecular imaging techniques, such as a PET/CT tomograph. First results using PET/CT imaging in the follow-up of breast cancer patients demonstrate increased specificity compared with FDG PET alone. Both imaging modalities, however, offer to detect recurrent and metastatic breast cancer disease at an early stage and thus continue to demonstrate the efficacy of molecular imaging in patient management, despite the limited therapeutic options in recurrent and metastatic breast cancer.  相似文献   

8.

Objective

Until now, serum tumor markers, physical examination, and conventional imaging modalities, such as CT or MRI, have been used in assessment of recurrence of cervical cancer after treatment. However, CT and MRI provide only anatomical data, which makes analysis of post-treatment change difficult. This study aims to explore the effectiveness of PET/CT, a new scanning device that combines PET and CT, in evaluation of cervical cancer lesions in patients with suspected recurrence.

Methods

We studied 51 patients suspected of recurrence among those who underwent F-18 FDG PET/CT for cervical cancer follow-up at Gachon University Gil Hospital between June 2006 and August 2009. Patients were considered to be at risk for recurrence if they reported symptoms that were clinically suggestive of recurrence, or if physical examination showed abnormalities, serum tumor marker levels rose, or follow-up images revealed changes, such as new lesions or swelling of previous sites. Sensitivity, accuracy, specificity, and positive and negative predictive values of PET/CT were measured.

Results

A total of 37 patients were confirmed with recurrence or metastasis, 13 of whom were diagnosed histologically. Measured across all patients, PET/CT scored 97.3% on sensitivity, 71.4% on specificity, a positive predictive value of 90%, a negative predictive value of 90.9%, and an accuracy of 90.2%. PET/CT yielded only one false negative diagnosis and four false positives.

Conclusion

As F-18 FDG PET/CT has high sensitivity and negative predictive value in diagnosis of recurrent cervical cancers, it is expected that it will be useful for clinical determination of recurrence and prevention of unnecessary additional treatments. The hope is that a future study on a larger scale will contribute further to determination of the efficacy of PET/CT.  相似文献   

9.
This study was designed to assess the value of whole-body positron emission tomography (PET) using 2-[fluorine-18]-fluoro-2-deoxy- D-glucose (FDG) for the diagnosis of recurrent ovarian cancer. Twenty-five patients who had previously undergone surgery for ovarian cancer were imaged using whole-body FDG-PET. During the 4 weeks preceding the PET study, conventional imaging, comprising computed tomography (CT) and magnetic resonance (MR) imaging of the abdomen and/or pelvis, was performed and serum CA125 levels were measured. PET imaging was commenced at 60 min after the intravenous administration of FDG in all patients. PET results were compared with the results of conventional imaging and CA125 levels, and related to pathological findings and clinical follow-up for more than 6 months. FDG-PET showed a sensitivity of 80% (16/20), a specificity of 100% (5/5) and an accuracy of 84% accuracy (21/25) for the diagnosis of recurrent ovarian cancer. The sensitivity, specificity and accuracy of conventional imaging were 55% (11/20), 100% (5/5) and 64% (16/25), respectively. PET could detect recurrent lesions in seven of nine patients in whom conventional imaging was falsely normal, while conventional imaging was true positive in two of four patients with false-negative PET results. The CA125 results showed a sensitivity of 75% (15/20), a specificity of 100% (5/5) and an accuracy of 80% accuracy (20/25). Among the 15 patients with true-positive CA125 results, PET correctly detected abnormal foci of recurrence in 13 patients (86.7%) whereas conventional imaging showed recurrent lesions in only eight patients (53.3%). In conclusion, our preliminary study demonstrates that FDG-PET may be accurate and useful for the detection of tumour recurrence when conventional imaging is inconclusive or negative, especially in patients with abnormal CA125 levels.  相似文献   

10.
In this prospective study, staging of Hodgkin's disease with 18-FDG PET was compared to CT, needle biopsy and staging laparotomy. Forty nine patients with Hodgkin's disease were studied; forty five with new disease and four being restaged for recurrent disease. Thirty eight patients had confirmation by needle or excisional biopsy, eleven by staging laparotomy including needle biopsy. Sensitivity, specificity, positive and negative predictive values of FDG PET were 100%, 100%, 100% and 100% in the laparotomy group. CT values were 20%, 83%, 50% and 56% in the same group. Overall in both surgical and non surgical patients FDG PET changed stage in 59% (29/49) of patients. FDG PET is a safe and effective method of staging Hodgkin's disease.  相似文献   

11.
AIM: We retrospectively assessed the use of [(18)F] fluorodeoxyglucose positron emission tomography (FDG PET) in the evaluation of recurrent disease in patients with history of gastric malignancy. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Eighteen patients were referred for FDG PET for evaluation of recurrent gastric cancer. Prior treatments included total (n = 4) or partial gastrectomy (n = 14) followed by chemotherapy alone (n = 7) or combined chemoradiation therapy (n = 2). The interval between the most recent treatment and PET ranged from 3 months to 2 years. Correlative diagnostic data were available in 16 patients and were all obtained within 3 months of the PET study. Validation was by clinical or imaging follow-up (2-45 months) in 16 patients and histology in two patients. RESULTS: PET was concordant with computed tomography (CT) in 12 patients (5 TP, 6 TN, 1 FN). In one patient with negative imaging studies, an incidental finding of left obstructive uropathy was determined to be due to metastatic ureteral stricture. Discordant imaging findings were present in four patients (22% of total). PET-detected diffuse metastatic lesions in three of these patients with rising serum tumour markers while other imaging studies were negative. Additional chemotherapy was initiated in these three patients (17% of total) based on PET localization of disease. PET and a gastric anastomosis biopsy were negative in another patient with positive CT. The remaining two patients without correlative imaging studies died shortly after positive PET studies with presumed recurrent cancer. CONCLUSION: FDG PET may be useful in the evaluation of recurrent gastric cancer, and can localize the disease when CT is non-diagnostic. Imaging evaluation with PET may also impact on the clinical management of patients with recurrent gastric cancer.  相似文献   

12.
PURPOSE: To evaluate the impact of F-18 fluorodeoxyglucose (FDG) positron emission tomography with fused computerized tomography (PET/CT) in comparison with same day contrast enhanced CT (CE-CT) in breast cancer management. METHOD: Seventy studies in 49 breast cancer patients, 17 for initial and 53 for restaging disease were included. All patients underwent PET/CT for diagnostic purposes followed by CE-CT scans of selected body regions. PET/CT was started approximately 90 minutes following IV injection of 10-15 mCi of F-18 FDG on a GE Discovery PET/CT system. Oral contrast was given before F-18 FDG injection. The CE-CT was performed according to departmental protocol. RESULTS: Out of a total of 257 lesions, 210 were concordant between PET/CT and CE-CT. There were 47 discordant lesions, which were verified by either biopsy (35) or follow-up (12 PET positive CE-CT negative lesions). PET/CT correctly identified 25 true positive (TP). CE-CT identified 2 TP lesions missed by PET/CT which were false negatives (FNs): one liver metastasis with necrosis, which was nonavid to FDG uptake because of necrosis and a second one missed on abdominal metastatic node, which did not change staging or treatment. PET/CT incorrectly identified 2 false positive lesions while CE-CT incorrectly identified 18 false positive. TP recurrence of the disease was found by PET/CT in 44% (15/34 pts), whereas 56% (19/34 pts) were free of disease. The CE-CT described progression of the disease in 1 true negative PET/CT study and no progression in 2 TP PET/CT studies. The sensitivity, specificity, accuracy, positive productive value, and negative productive value for PET/CT were 97.8%, 93.5%, 97.3%, 99.1%, 85% and for CE-CT were 87.6%, 42%, 82.1%, 91.6%, 31.7%. CONCLUSION: In this study, PET/CT played a more important role than CE-CT scans alone and provided an impact on the management of breast cancer patients.  相似文献   

13.
AIM: To determine whether or not fluorodeoxyglucose positron emission tomography (FDG PET) imaging when positive could obviate the necessity for sentinel lymph node biopsy and for complete axillary node dissection in patients with breast cancer. METHODS: A total of 80 female patients with a histological diagnosis of breast cancer and clinically negative axillary nodes underwent an FDG PET and sentinel lymph node biopsy (SLNB) or total axillary dissection for staging of axilla. Both SLNB and axillary dissection were performed in 72 patients, while eight patients had total axillary dissection without SLN biopsy. RESULTS: Of the 80 patients, 36 had lymph node metastasis on histopathology. SLNB was positive for metastasis in 35 (97%) of 36 patients (29 macrometastasis and seven micrometastasis). In the patient with false negative SLNB, the lymph node was completely replaced by the tumour. The FDG PET was true positive in 16 of 36 patients (sensitivity, 44%). There were two false positive studies with FDG PET, resulting in a specificity of 95%. The positive predictive value and accuracy of FDG PET for the detection of axillary lymph node metastasis were 89% and 72%, respectively. Univariate analysis revealed that higher grade of tumour, increased size and number of axillary lymph nodes were significantly associated with positive FDG PET results for axillary staging. CONCLUSION: FDG PET cannot replace histological staging using SLNB in patients with breast cancer. However, FDG PET has a high specificity and positive predictive value for staging of the axilla in these patients. The patients with higher grade of tumour, larger size and higher number of axillary lymph nodes may be considered for FDG PET scan for axillary staging.  相似文献   

14.
OBJECTIVE: We determined the prognostic value of 18F-fluorodeoxyglucose (FDG) positron emission tomography (PET) for patients with treated lung cancer. MATERIALS AND METHODS: We examined patients who underwent FDG PET after first-line treatment for non-small cell lung cancer. FDG PET results were correlated with survival rates to determine whether FDG PET findings were predictive of outcomes. RESULTS: After initial therapy, 113 patients with non-small cell lung cancer underwent FDG PET. One hundred patients had positive FDG PET results and a median survival of 12 months (95% confidence interval, 9.2-15.4). Thirteen patients had negative FDG PET results, and 11 (85%) of these patients are still living at a median follow-up of 34 months. The difference in survival for patients with positive and negative FDG PET results was statistically significant (p = 0.002). CONCLUSION: FDG PET has prognostic value and strongly correlates with survival rates of patients with treated lung cancer. Patients with positive FDG PET results have a significantly worse prognosis than patients with negative results. Additionally, FDG PET may be helpful in guiding therapeutic treatments.  相似文献   

15.
^18FDG—PET在诊断头颈部鳞状细胞癌复发中的价值   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
目的了解18FDG-PET在诊断头颈部鳞状细胞癌复发中的价值,确定标准吸收值(SUV)来鉴别放疗后的炎症与肿瘤复发.材料和方法头颈部鳞状细胞癌患者43例,在放疗后至少4个月(平均11个月)进行18FDG-PET检查.计算感兴趣区的SUV值.肿瘤复发诊断依赖组织病理学检查或6个月以上的临床随访.结果43例患者中,FDG-PET阳性23例,其中3例为假阳性;20例为阴性,其中假阴性2例.FDG-PET的诊断准确性是88%(38/43),而CT/MRI的诊断准确性则为66%(25/38).肿瘤复发病灶和炎症病灶的SUV有部分重叠,无统计学上差异(p=0.31).结论18FDG-PET检测头颈部鳞状细胞癌复发中肉眼分析更有价值;18FDG-PET较CT/MRI更为准确.  相似文献   

16.
PET in the follow-up of differentiated thyroid cancer   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
Fluorine-18-fluorodeoxyglucose (FDG) PET has become an increasingly important functional imaging modality in clinical oncology. This article will focus primarily on the role of FDG PET during treatment and follow-up of thyroid cancer. The major role of FDG PET is in patients with elevated thyroglobulin (Tg) levels where thyroid cancer tissue does not concentrate radioiodine rendering false-negative results on I-131 scanning. FDG PET imaging takes advantage of the increased uptake of FDG in cancer cells and is sensitive (60-94%) to the detection of recurrent or metastatic cancer in patients who have negative radioiodine scans. The specificity (25-90%) of PET imaging is relatively less than its sensitivity because some inflammatory processes avidly accumulate FDG. PET can fail to localize the tumour sites in some patients with well-differentiated thyroid cancer that retain good iodine ability. This can result the well recognized phenomenon of "flip-flop" depending on the differentiation of the thyroid cancer. Several studies have documented the higher accuracy of PET, compared with other imaging modalities in the evaluation of patients with recurrent or metastatic differentiated thyroid cancer. The value of thyroid stimulating hormone stimulation for FDG PET has recently been reported. Therefore, if available, this method should be considered in all patients of differentiated thyroid cancer with suspected recurrence and/or metastasis.  相似文献   

17.
This review article summarizes the role of PET/CT and PET/MRI in ovarian cancer. With regard to the diagnosis of ovarian cancer, the presence of FDG uptake within the ovary of a postmenopausal woman raises the concern for ovarian cancer. Multiple studies show that FDG PET/CT can detect lymph node and distant metastasis in ovarian cancer with high accuracy and may, therefore, alter the management to obtain better clinical outcomes. Although PET/CT staging is superior for N and M staging of ovarian cancer, its role is limited for T staging. Additionally, FDG PET/CT is of great benefit in evaluating treatment response and has prognostic value in patients with ovarian cancer. FDG PET/CT also has value to detect recurrent disease, particularly in patients with elevated serum CA-125 levels and negative or inconclusive conventional imaging test results. PET/MRI may beneficial for tumor staging because MRI has higher soft tissue contrast and no ionizing radiation exposure compared to CT. Some non-FDG PET radiotracers such as 18F-fluorothymidine (FLT) or 11C-methionine (MET) have been studied in preclinical and clinical studies as well and may play a role in the evaluation of patients with ovarian cancer.  相似文献   

18.
OBJECTIVE: To assess whether FDG PET could localize the recurrent or metastatic lesions in papillary thyroid cancer patients with negative radioiodine scan. METHODS: Whole body PET was performed after injecting 370-555 MBq of 18F-FDG in 108 patients, who were suspected of having recurrence or metastasis and whose 131I whole body scans were negative. Recurrence or metastasis occurred in 63 patients by pathology or clinical assessment, whereas 45 patients remained in remission. RESULTS: FDG PET revealed recurrence or metastases in 59 patients (sensitivity 93.7%), whereas thyroglobulin (Tg) levels were elevated in 41 (sensitivity 65.1%). In 35 of 45 patients in remission, FDG PET was negative (specificity 77.8%). When patients positive for antithyroglobulin antibody were excluded, the sensitivity and specificity of serum Tg became 84.8% and 46.9%, respectively. Compared to Tg measurement, FDG PET detected more metastatic lesions in cervical lymph nodes. Of 40 patients with a negative radioiodine scan showing diffuse hepatic uptake, metastases occurred in 23 patients and remission in 17. FDG PET showed 100% sensitivity and 76.5% specificity in the detection of recurrence in these 40 patients. CONCLUSION: FDG PET is useful for localizing recurrent or metastatic lesions in 131I scan-negative thyroid cancer patients. In particular, it is superior to serum Tg measurement for identifying metastases to cervical lymph nodes. We recommend its use in cases of negative radioiodine scan with diffuse hepatic uptake.  相似文献   

19.
The present review will provide an overview of the literature concerning the FDG PET diagnosis of pancreatic cancer and a summary from our experience of 231 cases of pancreatic lesions. FDG PET can effectively differentiate pancreatic cancer from benign lesion with high accuracy. Newly-developed PET scanners can detect small pancreatic cancers, up to 7 mm in diameter, by their high resolution, which could make a great contribution to the early detection of resectable and potentially curable pancreatic cancers. FDG PET is useful and cost-beneficial in the pre-operative staging of pancreatic cancer because an unexpected distant metastasis can be detected by whole-body PET in about 40% of the cases, which results in avoidance of unnecessary surgical procedures. FDG PET is also useful in evaluation of the treatment effect, monitoring after the operation and detection of recurrent pancreatic cancers. However, there are some drawbacks in PET diagnosis. A relatively wide overlap has been reported between semiquantitative uptake values obtained in cancers and those in inflammatory lesions. As for false-positive cases, active and chronic pancreatitis and autoimmune pancreatitis sometimes show high FDG accumulation and mimic pancreatic cancer with a shape of focal uptake. There were 8 false negative cases in the detection of pancreatic cancer by FDG PET, up to 33 mm in diameter, mainly because of their poor cellularity in cancer tissues. In addition, there are 19% of cancer cases with a decline in FDG uptake from 1 hr to 2 hr scan. FDG PET was recently applied to and was shown to be feasible in the differential diagnosis of cystic pancreatic lesions, such as intraductal papillary mucinous tumor of the pancreas. Further investigations are required to clarify the clinical value of FDG PET in predicting prognosis of the pancreatic patients.  相似文献   

20.
The aim of this study was to compare prospectively the accuracy of whole-body positron emission tomography (PET), CT and MRI in diagnosing primary and recurrent ovarian cancer. Nineteen patients (age range 23–76 years) were recruited with suspicious ovarian lesions at presentation (n = 8) or follow-up for recurrence (n = 11). All patients were scheduled for laparotomy and histological confirmation. Whole-body PET with FDG, contrast-enhanced spiral CT of the abdomen, including the pelvis, and MRI of the entire abdomen were performed. Each imaging study was evaluated separately. Imaging findings were correlated with histopathological diagnosis. The sensitivity, specificity and accuracy for lesion characterization in patients with suspicious ovarian lesions (n = 7) were, respectively: 100, 67 and 86 % for PET; 100, 67 and 86 % for CT; and 100, 100 and 100 % for MRI. For the diagnosis of recurrent disease (n = 10), PET had a sensitivity of 100 %, specificity of 50 % and accuracy of 90 %. The PET technique was the only technique which correctly identified a single transverse colon metastasis. Results for CT were 40, 50 and 43 %, and for MRI 86, 100 and 89 %, respectively. No statistically significant difference was seen. Neither FDG PET nor CT nor MRI can replace surgery in the detection of microscopic peritoneal disease. No statistically significant difference was observed for the investigated imaging modalities with regard to lesion characterization or detection of recurrent disease; thus, the methods are permissible alternatives. The PET technique, however, has the drawback of less accurate spatial assignment of small lesions compared with CT and MRI. Received: 9 April 1999; Revised: 22 June 1999; Accepted: 25 August 1999  相似文献   

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