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18F-fluorodeoxyglucose positron emission tomography combined with whole-body computed tomographic angiography in critically ill patients with suspected severe sepsis with no definite diagnosis
Authors:Damien Mandry  Alexis Tatopoulos  Elodie Chevalier-Mathias  Jérémie Lemarié  Pierre-Edouard Bollaert  Véronique Roch  Pierre Olivier  Pierre-Yves Marie  Sébastien Gibot
Institution:1. CHU Nancy, P?le d’imagerie, Nancy, 54000, France
2. Faculty of Medicine, University of Lorraine, 54000, Nancy, France
3. INSERM, UMR 947, Nancy, 54000, France
4. Service de Réanimation Médicale, CHU de Nancy – H?pital Central, Avenue de Lattre de Tassigny, 54000, Nancy, France
5. INSERM, UMR 1116, Nancy, 54000, France
6. Nancyclotep, Experimental Imaging Platform, Nancy, 54000, France
Abstract:

Purpose

Timely identification of septic foci is critical in patients with severe sepsis or septic shock of unknown origin. This prospective pilot study aimed to assess 18F-fluorodeoxyglucose positron emission tomography (FDG-PET), combined with whole-body computed tomographic angiography (CTA), in patients with suspected severe sepsis and for whom the prior diagnostic workup had been inconclusive.

Methods

Patients hospitalized in an intensive care unit with a suspected severe sepsis but no definite diagnosis after 48 h of extensive investigations were prospectively included and referred for a whole body FDG-PET/CTA. Results from FDG-PET/CTA were assessed according to the final diagnosis obtained after follow-up and additional diagnostic workup.

Results

Seventeen patients were prospectively included, all on mechanical ventilation and 14 under vasopressor drugs. The FDG-PET/CTA exam 1) was responsible for only one desaturation and one hypotension, both quickly reversible under treatment; 2) led to suspect 16 infectious sites among which 13 (81 %) could be confirmed by further diagnostic procedures; and 3) triggered beneficial changes in the medical management of 12 of the 17 study patients (71 %). The FDG-PET/CTA images showed a single or predominant infectious focus in two cases where CTA was negative and in three cases where CTA exhibited multiple possible foci.

Conclusion

Whole-body FDG-PET/CTA appears to be feasible, relatively safe, and provides reliable and useful information, when prospectively planned in patients with suspected severe sepsis and for whom prior diagnostic workup had been inconclusive. The FDG-PET images are particularly helpful when CTA exhibits no or multiple possible sites.
Keywords:
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