OBJECTIVE: To review diagnostic accuracy of positron emission tomography/computed tomography (PET/CT) for colorectal liver metastases. BACKGROUND: Colorectal liver metastases can be treated with surgical resection; however, recurrence is seen in 58% of patients. PET/CT may better detect extra-hepatic disease before surgery to more accurately identify eligible candidates for surgery and, through better selection, improve patient prognosis. METHODS: We conducted a comprehensive systematic review on adults with colorectal liver metastases who received PET/CT and CT scans to detect metastases. The gold standard to confirm the diagnosis was histology. Study selection, quality assessment, and data extraction were completed independently by 2 investigators. Pooling of results was not feasible because of heterogeneity. A qualitative summary of results is presented. RESULTS: From 1083 citations, we identified 6 studies (440 patients) for the review. For extra-hepatic lesions (3 studies; 178 patients), PET/CT was more sensitive than CT, but specificities were similar (PET/CT sensitivity [SN] = 75%-89% and specificity [SP] = 95%-96% vs. CT SN = 58%-64% and SP = 87%-97%). For hepatic lesions (5 studies; 316 patients), PET/CT had higher SN and SP than CT (PET/CT SN = 91%-100% and SP = 75%-100%; CT SN = 78%-94% and SP = 25%-98%). For local recurrence (3 studies; 206 patients), PET/CT also had better accuracy than CT with SN = 93% to 100% and SP = 97% to 98% versus SN = 0 %-100% and SP = 97%-98%. CONCLUSION: Based on this systematic review, we conclude that PET/CT has a higher accuracy for detection of extra-hepatic and hepatic colorectal metastatic disease than CT alone. However, the results are based on a small number of studies and should be interpreted cautiously.
OBJECTIVE: To review diagnostic accuracy of positron emission tomography/computed tomography (PET/CT) for colorectal liver metastases. BACKGROUND:Colorectal liver metastases can be treated with surgical resection; however, recurrence is seen in 58% of patients. PET/CT may better detect extra-hepatic disease before surgery to more accurately identify eligible candidates for surgery and, through better selection, improve patient prognosis. METHODS: We conducted a comprehensive systematic review on adults with colorectal liver metastases who received PET/CT and CT scans to detect metastases. The gold standard to confirm the diagnosis was histology. Study selection, quality assessment, and data extraction were completed independently by 2 investigators. Pooling of results was not feasible because of heterogeneity. A qualitative summary of results is presented. RESULTS: From 1083 citations, we identified 6 studies (440 patients) for the review. For extra-hepatic lesions (3 studies; 178 patients), PET/CT was more sensitive than CT, but specificities were similar (PET/CT sensitivity [SN] = 75%-89% and specificity [SP] = 95%-96% vs. CT SN = 58%-64% and SP = 87%-97%). For hepatic lesions (5 studies; 316 patients), PET/CT had higher SN and SP than CT (PET/CT SN = 91%-100% and SP = 75%-100%; CT SN = 78%-94% and SP = 25%-98%). For local recurrence (3 studies; 206 patients), PET/CT also had better accuracy than CT with SN = 93% to 100% and SP = 97% to 98% versus SN = 0 %-100% and SP = 97%-98%. CONCLUSION: Based on this systematic review, we conclude that PET/CT has a higher accuracy for detection of extra-hepatic and hepatic colorectal metastatic disease than CT alone. However, the results are based on a small number of studies and should be interpreted cautiously.
Authors: Eric P van der Stok; Manon C W Spaander; Dirk J Grünhagen; Cornelis Verhoef; Ernst J Kuipers Journal: Nat Rev Clin Oncol Date: 2016-12-20 Impact factor: 66.675
Authors: Camilo Correa-Gallego; Somali Gavane; Ravinder Grewal; Andrea Cercek; David S Klimstra; Alexandra N Gewirtz; T Peter Kingham; Yuman Fong; Ronald P DeMatteo; Peter J Allen; William R Jarnagin; Nancy Kemeny; Michael I D'Angelica Journal: HPB (Oxford) Date: 2015-05-23 Impact factor: 3.647