Prospective evaluation of (18)F-FDG positron emission tomography in the preoperative staging of patients with hepatic colorectal metastases Journal Article


Authors: Akhurst, T.; Gönen, M.; Baser, R. E.; Schwartz, L. H.; Tuorto, S.; Brody, L. A.; Covey, A.; Brown, K. T.; Larson, S. M.; Fong, Y.
Article Title: Prospective evaluation of (18)F-FDG positron emission tomography in the preoperative staging of patients with hepatic colorectal metastases
Abstract: Background: Despite considerable advances in preoperative imaging, up to one-third of patients operatively explored for hepatic colorectal metastases are unexpectedly found to harbor unresectable intrahepatic or extrahepatic disease. Methods: The current study is a prospective, blinded study comparing utility of [F-18]2-fluoro-2deoxyglucose positron emission tomography (F-18-FDG-PET) to computed tomography (CT) and CT arterial portography (CTAP) as preoperative staging. Results: The 125 planned subjects were enrolled. Findings seen on FDG-PET alone changed therapy for 23 of 125 patients ( 18%). FDG-PET confirmed other radiologic findings in 16 cases (13%), for an overall influence on therapy in 39 cases (31%). FDG-PET was the most sensitive diagnostic imaging test for extrahepatic cancer; it was 80-90% sensitive for extrahepatic cancer and 70-90% specific. For the 28 cases of unresectable disease due to extrahepatic disease, FDG-PET findings solely changed therapies in 16 cases (57%) and influenced therapy in seven other cases (25%). Of the 21 unresectable cases due to extent of intrahepatic disease, FDG-PET did not solely change therapy in any. Overall, FDG-PET had the lowest sensitivity for hepatic sites compared with CT or CTAP. In particular, small (<1 cm) liver tumors were particularly poorly detected by FDG-PET. The area under the receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curve for small tumors was 0.58 and for patients on chemotherapy it was 0.66, a modest improvement over no imaging. Conclusions: FDG-PET is an important test for preoperative staging of patients with hepatic colorectal metastases, affecting treatment decisions in nearly one-third of patients. The high yield is due mainly to detection of extrahepatic disease. It is therefore recommended in patients with extrahepatic lesions suspected to be disseminated cancer or those with high risk for extrahepatic disease. It is not a good test for identification of small tumors in the liver.
Keywords: recurrence; risk; fdg-pet; surgery; resection; metastases; management; ct; positron emission tomography (pet); impact; colorectal; selection; liver metastases; computed tomography (ct); hepatic; cancer
Journal Title: Hepatobiliary Surgery and Nutrition
Volume: 11
Issue: 4
ISSN: 2304-3881
Publisher: AME Publishing Company  
Date Published: 2022-08-01
Start Page: 539
End Page: 554
Language: English
ACCESSION: WOS:000722198600001
DOI: 10.21037/hbsn-19-357
PROVIDER: wos
PMCID: PMC9396102
PUBMED: 36016741
Notes: Article -- Source: Wos
Altmetric
Citation Impact
BMJ Impact Analytics
MSK Authors
  1. Raymond E Baser
    133 Baser
  2. Mithat Gonen
    1030 Gonen
  3. Lawrence H Schwartz
    309 Schwartz
  4. Anne Covey
    167 Covey
  5. Yuman Fong
    775 Fong
  6. Timothy J Akhurst
    139 Akhurst
  7. Lynn Brody
    120 Brody
  8. Karen T Brown
    178 Brown
  9. Scott J Tuorto
    24 Tuorto
  10. Steven M Larson
    959 Larson