Is 2-deoxy-2-[18F]fluoro-D-glucose PET/CT acquisition from the upper thigh to the vertex of skull useful in oncological patients?
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Date
2015Author
Salvatore, Barbara
Caprio, Maria Grazia
Fonti, Rosa
D’Amico, D.
Fraioli, F.
Salvatore, Marco
Pace, Leonardo
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Show full item recordAbstract
Aim: To assess whether performing routinely 2-deoxy-2-
[18F]fluoro-D-glucose PET/CT (18FDG PET/CT) scan
from the upper thigh to the vertex of skull is clinically
relevant.
Materials and Methods: 3502 (1634 female; mean-age
60+16) consecutive patients undergoing 18FDG PET/CT
were retrospectively analyzed. Patients were divided in 10
groups according to primary malignancy. Chi-square
analysis was used to assess differences among
proportions. A p value < 0.05 was considered significant.
Results: 18FDG PET/CT was positive in head district in
130/3502 (3,7%) patients. In all patients lesions were
unknown before PET/CT examination. PET/CT showed
158 positive brain/head uptake in the 130 patients. The
158 lesions were localized in: brain (43/158; 27%), bone
(52/158; 33%), lymph node (1/158; 0,6%), soft tissue
(55/158; 35%) and other sites (7/158; 4,4%). According to
each group, patients were positive in the head district in
1.0% for Gastrointestinal Cancer (7/690), 3.0 % for
Genitourinary Cancer (3/101), 3.7 % for Haemathologic
Cancer (59/1590), 2.7 % for Gynaecologic Cancer
(3/112), 7.8% for Head-Neck-Thyroid and Parathyroid
Cancer (26/331), 3.5% for Breast Cancer (7/200), 2.6%
for Lung Cancer (7/271), 3.4% for Melanoma (2/59),
7.4% for Sarcoma (2/27), 11.6% for Unknown Primary
Tumour (14/121). Conclusion: Our data show a relatively high incidence of
brain/head lesion in patients with Unknown Primary
Tumour.