Erschienen in:
21.12.2016 | Breast
MRI fused with prone FDG PET/CT improves the primary tumour staging of patients with breast cancer
verfasst von:
Maria J. Garcia-Velloso, Maria J. Ribelles, Macarena Rodriguez, Alejandro Fernandez-Montero, Lidia Sancho, Elena Prieto, Marta Santisteban, Natalia Rodriguez-Spiteri, Miguel A. Idoate, Fernando Martinez-Regueira, Arlette Elizalde, Luis J. Pina
Erschienen in:
European Radiology
|
Ausgabe 8/2017
Einloggen, um Zugang zu erhalten
Abstract
Objective
Our aim was to evaluate the diagnostic accuracy of magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) fused with prone 2-[fluorine-18]-fluoro-2-deoxy-D-glucose (FDG) positron emission tomography (PET) in primary tumour staging of patients with breast cancer.
Methods
This retrospective study evaluated 45 women with 49 pathologically proven breast carcinomas. MRI and prone PET-CT scans with time-of-flight and point-spread-function reconstruction were performed with the same dedicated breast coil. The studies were assessed by a radiologist and a nuclear medicine physician, and evaluation of fused images was made by consensus. The final diagnosis was based on pathology (90 lesions) or follow-up ≥ 24 months (17 lesions).
Results
The study assessed 72 malignant and 35 benign lesions with a median size of 1.8 cm (range 0.3–8.4 cm): 31 focal, nine multifocal and nine multicentric cases. In lesion-by-lesion analysis, sensitivity, specificity, positive and negative predictive values were 97%, 80%, 91% and 93% for MRI, 96%, 71%, 87%, and 89% for prone PET, and 97%. 94%, 97% and 94% for MRI fused with PET. Areas under the curve (AUC) were 0.953, 0.850, and 0.983, respectively (p < 0.01).
Conclusions
MRI fused with FDG-PET is more accurate than FDG-PET in primary tumour staging of breast cancer patients and increases the specificity of MRI.
Key points
• FDG PET-CT may improve the specificity of MRI in breast cancer staging.
• MRI fused with prone 2-[fluorine-18]-fluoro-2-deoxy-D-glucose PET-CT has better overall diagnostic performance than MRI.
• The clinical role of fused PET-MRI has not yet been established.