PET/CT proves superior
for staging cancers
By: James Brice
Nuclear medicine physicians
have suspected since the advent of PET/CT that
the hybrid technology would outperform either
PET or CT alone for staging cancer. Those
suspicions have been confirmed in a study of 260
patients at the University of Essen, Germany. It
found that PET/CT is substantially more accurate
for staging carcinoma than PET or CT alone and
even PET and CT viewed side by side (PET+CT).
The trial pitting one modality against
another indicated that PET/CT can be recommended
as a first-line diagnostic tool for various
cancers, said Dr. Patrick Veit, a research
fellow who presented the study on behalf of
principal investigator Dr. Gerald Antoch, an
attending physician in the radiology department
at Essen.
The study involved 112 patients who were
scanned for primary tumor stages and 148 who
were imaged to investigate suspected recurrent
disease. Cases of lung, head and neck,
gastrointestinal tract, liver, thyroid, and
uterine cancers were included in the mix.
Readings were aimed at detecting primary or
recurrent tumor, and analyses were completed for
overall and separate TNM staging. The physicians
also assessed the scans' impact on patient
management. The distribution of patients for
T-stage, N-stage, and M-stage histology was 77,
72, and 57, respectively. The average follow-up
was 311 days.
PET/CT correctly staged 63 of the T-stage
patients, significantly more than the 55 who
were correctly staged with PET+CT and with CT or
PET alone. Of the N-stage patients, PET/CT
staged 240, again significantly more than PET+CT
and CT or PET alone. PET/CT was correct for 248
M-stage patients and was significantly more
adept than PET and CT viewed separately, but it
was no better than PET+CT in these cases.
Overall TNM-stage results indicated that 218
patients were correctly staged with PET/CT. It
was significantly better than PET+CT, PET, and
CT. P values quantifying the magnitude of
statistical significance for all three sets of
comparisons were in the 0.0001 range, Veit said.
PET/CT would have altered patient management
regardless of which approach was used for
initial staging, based on German clinical
guidelines for prescribing therapy, he said. It
would hypothetically have changed the
therapeutic recommendation in 17% of the cases
if it had been used as a follow-up procedure
after PET-based staging. Different therapies
would have been prescribed for 17% of cases
initially examined with CT and 6% of patients
evaluated with PET+CT.
Patients were examined with a single PET/CT
study. PET and CT images were then drawn from
that data set to form the basis for comparison.
The PET images were interpreted by two nuclear
medicine specialists visually and then
quantitatively based on standard uptake values.
The thresholds of malignancy for intrahepatic
and extrahepatic lesions were SUVs of at least
2.5 and 3.5, respectively. Two radiologists
examined the CT scans. Lymph nodes were assessed
by size.
Side-by-side PET and CT analysis was
performed simultaneously by a radiologist and
nuclear medicine specialist. Increased glucose
metabolism was considered evidence of pathology.
Determinations of lymph node involvement in this
instance was independent of size. The same
approach was applied when evaluating PET/CT
images, Veit said.