Mengxia Zhang, Lifang Pang, Haojun Yu, Hongcheng Shi
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Objective: Positron emission tomography/computed tomography (PET/CT) and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) are complementary in staging of nasopharyngeal carcinoma (NPC). The combination of MRI and functional imaging from PET in PET/MR is promising in NPC management. Diagnostic performance of PET/CT and PET/MR was compared in 46 patients with histologically confirmed NPC under different disease scenarios, including primary non-metastatic cases, primary metastatic cases, recurrence and/or metastasis after treatment, and post-treatment follow-up cases.
Subjects and methods: Forty-six patients underwent both PET/CT and PET/MR in the same day. Primary tumor extension into risk-stratified anatomic structures, retropharyngeal and cervical lymph node metastasis, distant metastasis and post-treatment follow-up results, were compared.
Results: For high-risk structures, PET/MR detected two more sides of tensor/levator veli palatine muscle involvement, one more case of clivus involvement, and ruled out 12 false-positive sides of prevertebral muscle involvement by PET/CT. For medium-risk structures, PET/MR detected four more sides of medial pterygoid muscle involvement. For low-risk structures, abnormal signal on massa lateralis atlantis was detected by PET/MR. PET/MR detected 14 more positive retropharyngeal lymph nodes and more liver micrometastases than PET/CT. Overall, PET/MR changed two patients' T staging.
Conclusion: Positron emission tomography/MR outperforms PET/CT in delineating muscle, skull-base bone, and nodal involvement, and identifying liver micrometastases, may serve as a single-step staging modality for NPC.
期刊介绍:
The Hellenic Journal of Nuclear Medicine published by the Hellenic Society of
Nuclear Medicine in Thessaloniki, aims to contribute to research, to education and
cover the scientific and professional interests of physicians, in the field of nuclear
medicine and in medicine in general. The journal may publish papers of nuclear
medicine and also papers that refer to related subjects as dosimetry, computer science,
targeting of gene expression, radioimmunoassay, radiation protection, biology, cell
trafficking, related historical brief reviews and other related subjects. Original papers
are preferred. The journal may after special agreement publish supplements covering
important subjects, dully reviewed and subscripted separately.