PurposeThe aim of this study was to evaluate integrated 18F-FDG PET/MRI as a one-stop diagnostic procedure in the assessment of (active) idiopathic retroperitoneal fibrosis (RPF)MethodsA total of 22 examinations comprising a PET/CT scan followed by a PET/MRI scan in 17 patients (13 men, 4 women, age 58?±?11 years) with histopathologically confirmed RPF at diagnosis or during follow-up under steroid therapy were analysed in correlation with laboratory inflammation markers (ESR, CRP). The patient cohort was subdivided into two groups: 6 examinations in untreated and 16 in treated patients. Tissue formations in typically periaortic localization suggestive of RPF were visually and quantitatively evaluated. The PET analysis included the assessment of SUVmax and a qualitative score for FDG uptake in RPF tissue in relation to the uptake in the liver. MRI analysis included evaluation of the T2-weighted image signal intensity, contrast enhancement and diffusion restriction (ADC values). Mean values were compared using the Mann-Whitney U test. ADC, SUVmax and ESR values were correlated using Pearson’s correlation.ResultsMRI analysis revealed restricted diffusion in 100 % and 56 %, hyperintense T2 signal in 100 % and 31 %, and contrast enhancement in the periaortic tissue formation suggestive of RPF in 100 % and 62.5 % in the untreated and treated patients, respectively. In the qualitative and quantitative PET analysis, statistically significant differences were found for mean FDG uptake scores (2.5?±?0.8 in untreated patients and 1.1?±?0.9 in treated patients) and mean SUVmax (7.8?±?3.5 and 4.1?±?2.2, respectively). A strong correlation was found between the ADC values and SUVmax (Pearson r? ??0.65, P?=?0.0019), and between ESR and CRP values and SUVmax (both r?=?0.45, P?=?0.061).ConclusionIntegrated 18F-FDG PET/MRI shows high diagnostic potential as a one-stop diagnostic procedure for the assessment of (active) RPF providing multiparametric supportive information. |