PET/MRI assessment of lung nodules in primary abdominal malignancies: sensitivity and outcome analysis

Pierpaolo Biondetti, Mark G. Vangel, Rita M. Lahoud, Felipe S. Furtado, Bruce R. Rosen, David Groshar, Lina G. Canamaque, Lale Umutlu, Eric W. Zhang, Umar Mahmood, Subba R. Digumarthy, Jo Anne O. Shepard, Onofrio A. Catalano*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

25 Scopus citations

Abstract

Purpose: To evaluate PET/MR lung nodule detection compared to PET/CT or CT, to determine growth of nodules missed by PET/MR, and to investigate the impact of missed nodules on clinical management in primary abdominal malignancies. Methods: This retrospective IRB-approved study included [18F]-FDG PET/MR in 126 patients. All had standard of care chest imaging (SCI) with diagnostic chest CT or PET/CT within 6 weeks of PET/MR that served as standard of reference. Two radiologists assessed lung nodules (size, location, consistency, position, and [18F]-FDG avidity) on SCI and PET/MR. A side-by-side analysis of nodules on SCI and PET/MR was performed. The nodules missed on PET/MR were assessed on follow-up SCI to ascertain their growth (≥ 2 mm); their impact on management was also investigated. Results: A total of 505 nodules (mean 4 mm, range 1–23 mm) were detected by SCI in 89/126 patients (66M:60F, mean age 60 years). PET/MR detected 61 nodules for a sensitivity of 28.1% for patient and 12.1% for nodule, with higher sensitivity for > 7 mm nodules (< 30% and > 70% respectively, p < 0.05). 75/337 (22.3%) of the nodules missed on PET/MR (follow-up mean 736 days) demonstrated growth. In patients positive for nodules at SCI and negative at PET/MR, missed nodules did not influence patients’ management. Conclusions: Sensitivity of lung nodule detection on PET/MR is affected by nodule size and is lower than SCI. 22.3% of missed nodules increased on follow-up likely representing metastases. Although this did not impact clinical management in study group with primary abdominal malignancy, largely composed of extra-thoracic advanced stage cancers, with possible different implications in patients without extra-thoracic spread.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)1976-1986
Number of pages11
JournalEuropean Journal of Nuclear Medicine and Molecular Imaging
Volume48
Issue number6
DOIs
StatePublished - Jun 2021

Keywords

  • Lung nodule
  • PET/CT
  • PET/MR
  • PET/MRI
  • Pulmonary nodule

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