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Noninvasive staging of lung cancer. Indications and limitations of gallium-67 citrate imaging
Authors:C Bekerman  V J Caride  P B Hoffer  C A Boles
Affiliation:College of Medicine, University of Illinois, Chicago.
Abstract:The results of evaluation of the hila and mediastinum with 67Ga scans are contradictory, as are the recommendations by different investigators on the use of 67Ga scintigraphy in the clinical evaluation of patients with primary lung carcinoma. Nevertheless, the economy and logistic simplicity of evaluating local and distant metastases with a single imaging procedure are attractive, especially because the symptoms may not enable the physician to make a correct identification of the organ systems affected by metastases. Neumann and Hoffer state that "at present conventional Ga-67 scanning techniques cannot be recommended for preoperative staging of mediastinal lymph node metastases in lung cancer patients." According to Waxman, 67Ga scintigraphy, relative to other imaging modalities, is a sensitive indicator of hilar spread of a tumor. However, because of the normally high background activity within the sternum and spine, mediastinal abnormalities may be poorly detected. Since most pulmonary tumors metastasize via regional nodes to the pulmonary hilum and then to the mediastinum, the high sensitivity for the detection of pulmonary hilar abnormalities and the high specificity for detection of mediastinal lesions suggest that gallium scintigraphy is a valuable adjunctive test when used appropriately. The results obtained locally are probably the best guide for individual physicians in the selection of diagnostic tests for their patients. Gallium scans may thus be helpful in the clinical evaluation of patients with lung cancer. Although gallium scans identify mediastinal node involvement, there is considerable controversy over the relationship between the sensitivity and specificity of the method. By detecting distant extrathoracic metastases, the 67Ga scan may identify a small group of patients who can be spared a needless operation. Gallium scanning fails specifically for metastases within the brain; thus, it does not supplant CT scans of the brain and it is less sensitive than bone scans in detecting osseous metastases. Gallium scanning of patients with small-cell lung cancer is not useful in the selection of therapy but does become important from a prognostic standpoint. Patients with extrathoracic involvement by small-cell carcinoma of the lung are known to have limited survival times compared with those of patients with thoracic involvement alone. In identifying patients with extensive disease, the oncologist is thus provided with prognostic information that may be useful in the counseling of the patient and the patient's family.
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