assessment of mediastinal tumors using suvmax and volumetric parameters on fdg pet/ct

Authors

takahiro morita department of nuclear medicine and tracer kinetics, osaka university graduate school of medicine

mitsuaki tatsumi department of radiology, osaka university hospital

mana ishibashi department of nuclear medicine and tracer kinetics, osaka university graduate school of medicine

kayako isohashi department of nuclear medicine and tracer kinetics, osaka university graduate school of medicine

abstract

objective(s): this study aimed to evaluate the role of pretreatment suvmax and volumetric fdg positron emission tomography (pet) parameters in the differentiation between benign and malignant mediastinal tumors. in addition, we investigated whether pretreatment suvmax and volumetric fdg-pet parameters could distinguish thymomas from thymic carcinomas, and low-risk from high-risk thymomas.methods: this study was conducted on 52 patients with mediastinal tumors undergoing fdg-pet/ct. histological examination indicated that 29 mediastinal tumors were benign, and 23 cases were malignant. to obtain quantitative pet/ct parameters, we determined the maximum standardized uptake value (suvmax), volumetric parameters, metabolic tumor volume (mtv), and total lesion glycolysis (tlg) for primary tumors using suvmax cut-off value of 2.5. suvmax, mtv and tlg of benign and malignant tumors were comparedusing the mann-whitney u test. moreover, receiver-operating curve (roc) analysis was applied to identify the cut-off values of suvmax, mtv and tlg for the accurate differentiation of benign and malignant tumors. suvmax, mtv and tlg were compared between thymomas and thymic carcinomas, as well as low-risk and high-risk thymomas.results: mean suvmax, mtv and tlg of malignant mediastinal tumors were significantly higher compared to benign tumors (p<0.001). sensitivity, specificity, accuracy, positive predictive value, and negative predictive value of suvmax were 78.2%, 86.2%, 82.6%,81.8%, and 83.3%, respectively. these values were estimated at 82.6%, 96.6%, 90.4%,95%, and 87.5% for mtv and tlg, respectively. additionally, optimal cut-off values for the differentiation of benign and malignant mediastinal tumors were determined at 4.2 and 22.3 ml and 79.7 g for suvmax, mtv and tlg, respectively. mean suvmax, mtv and tlg of thymic carcinomas were significantly higher compared to thymomas (p<0.01), while no significant differences were observed in the mean quantitative parameters between low-risk and high-risk thymomas.conclusion: although suvmax, mtv and tlg could not distinguish between low-risk and high-risk thymomas, these parameters might be able to differentiate benign tumors from malignant mediastinal tumors  noninvasively. these parameters could be used to distinguish between thymomas and thymic carcinomas as well. therefore, fdg-pet/ct parameters seem to be accurate indices for the detection of malignant mediastinal tumors.

Upgrade to premium to download articles

Sign up to access the full text

Already have an account?login

similar resources

Assessment of mediastinal tumors using SUVmax and volumetric parameters on FDG PET/CT

Objective(s): This study aimed to evaluate the role of pretreatment SUVmax and volumetric FDG positron emission tomography (PET) parameters in the differentiation between benign and malignant mediastinal tumors. In addition, we investigated whether pretreatment SUVmax and volumetric FDG-PET parameters could distinguish thymomas from thymic carcinomas, and low-risk from high-risk thymomas.Method...

full text

Assessment of Mediastinal Tumors Using SUVmax and Volumetric Parameters on FDG-PET/CT

OBJECTIVES This study aimed to evaluate the role of pretreatment SUVmax and volumetric FDG positron emission tomography (PET) parameters in the differentiation between benign and malignant mediastinal tumors. In addition, we investigated whether pretreatment SUVmax and volumetric FDG-PET parameters could distinguish thymomas from thymic carcinomas, and low-risk from high-risk thymomas. METHOD...

full text

FDG PETCT in colorectal cancer

Colorectal cancer represents the second most common malignancy worldwide, with approximately one million newly diagnosed cases each year, and is the fourth leading cause of cancer mortality. This article provides an overview of the role of FDG (fluorodeoxyglucose) PET (positron emission tomography) CT (computed tomography) for assessment in patients with colorectal cancer. A summary of key lear...

full text

assessment of the efficiency of s.p.g.c refineries using network dea

data envelopment analysis (dea) is a powerful tool for measuring relative efficiency of organizational units referred to as decision making units (dmus). in most cases dmus have network structures with internal linking activities. traditional dea models, however, consider dmus as black boxes with no regard to their linking activities and therefore do not provide decision makers with the reasons...

Evaluation of 95 Cases with Mediastinal Tumors

 Introduction:Mediastinum contains different vital structures that are located in the anterior and middle or posterior compartments. Various types of mediastinal masses or tumors can be seen in the mediastinum. Materials and Methods:This case series study was performed on 95 patients who had referred to Mashhad University of Medical Sciences between 1990 and 2010 were reviewed. The Inclusion cr...

full text

My Resources

Save resource for easier access later


Journal title:
asia oceania journal of nuclear medicine and biology

جلد ۵، شماره ۱، صفحات ۲۲-۲۹

Hosted on Doprax cloud platform doprax.com

copyright © 2015-2023