ESSEN, Germany-Positron
emission tomography-computed tomography
(PET/CT) is significantly
more accurate than CT alone, PET
alone, and side-by-side CT and PET
for evaluating the TNM stage of various
malignant diseases. This diagnostic
advantage translates into treatment
plan changes in a substantial number
of patients, according to researcher
Gerald Antoch, MD, and colleagues at
University Hospital Essen in Germany.
Dr. Antoch reported his group's
findings at the 90th Scientific Assembly
and Annual Meeting of the Radiological Society of North America
(abstract SSA24-02).
The researchers viewed scans from
260 consecutive patients (167 female)
with different oncological diseases
who had undergone 2-fluorodeoxyglucose
(FDG)-PET/CT for tumor
staging. A total of 112 patients were
imaged for primary tumor staging and
148 were imaged for suspected recurrent
disease.
The majority of patients had malignant
non-small-cell lung carcinoma,
followed by head and neck tumors,
gastrointestinal tumors, and
others. Investigators performed PET/
CT with an axial field-of-view from
the head to the upper thigh, using
intravenous contrast CT to obtain
diagnostic data.
Two nuclear medicine specialists
viewed the PET-alone images. They
evaluated the images first qualitatively
by the areas of increased glucose metabolism,
then quantitatively by the
standard uptake value (SUV).
An SUV cutoff of 2.5 for malignancy
was applied for all organs except the
liver, for which the cutoff value was
3.5. The difference in cutoff values was
based on an analysis of the literature
that showed generally higher FDG
uptake in the liver than in the rest of
the body organs, Dr. Antoch said.
Two radiologists examined the CT
images and determined whether
lymph nodes were metastatic, based
on their size. Side-by-side images were
evaluated by radiologists and nuclear
medicine specialists on two different
screens: CT on the right screen, PET
on the left. The images were purposely
misregistered to ensure a degree of
objectivity.
The same radiologists and nuclear
medicine specialists reviewed the fused
images 1 month after the side-by-side
image analysis. Increased glucose metabolism
was again used to determine
pathology.
The researchers performed a separate
analysis for the T-, N-, and Mstages
and also determined the impact
of PET/CT on patient management.
Histopathology was the standard
of reference for 77 patients for the
T-stage, 72 patients for the N-stage,
and 57 patients for the M-stage. For all
other patients, a mean clinical followup
of 311 days served as the standard
of reference.
TNM Staging
Significantly Improved
Fused PET/CT proved significantly
more accurate in assessing the overall
TNM stage compared with CT
alone, PET alone, and side-by-side CT
plus PET. Among the 260 patients,
84% were correctly staged with PET/
CT, vs 76 % with side-by-side CT plus
PET, 64% with PET alone, and 63%
with CT alone.
Sensitivities and specificities for
characterization of the N-stage were
92% and 93%, respectively, for PET/
CT, 88% and 89% for side-by-side CT
plus PET, 85% and 88% for PET, and
64% and 83% for CT.
Sensitivities and specificities for assessment
of the M-stage were 94% and
97%, respectively, with PET/CT, 92%
and 96% with side-by-side CT plus
PET, 78% and 99% with PET, and
82% and 95% with CT.
"The most important point, however,
is whether PET/CT had an impact
on patient management," Dr.
Antoch said. "Does it change patient
therapy from palliative to curative,
from curative to palliative? Does it
change the surgical approach from
extended surgery to limited surgery?"
Combined PET/CT affected the treatment
plan for 17% of patients compared
with PET alone, for 15% of patients
compared with CT alone, and
for 6% of patients compared with sideby-
side CT plus PET.
