| Literature DB >> 21490726 |
Haerle Stephan K1, Stoeckli Sandro J.
Abstract
Adequate staging and treatment of the neck in squamous cell carcinoma of the oral cavity and oropharynx (OSCC) is of paramount importance. Elective neck dissection (END) of the clinical N0-neck is widely advocated as neck treatment. With regard to the prevalence of 20-40% of occult neck metastases found in the ND specimens, the majority of patients undergo surgery of the lymphatic drainage basin without therapeutic benefit. Sentinel node biopsy (SNB) has been shown to be a safe, reliable and accurate alternative treatment modality for selected patients. Using this technique, lymphatic mapping is crucial. Previous reports suggested a benefit of single photon emission computed tomography with CT (SPECT/CT) over dynamic planar lymphoscintigraphy (LS) alone. SPECT/CT allows the surgeon for better topographical orientation and delineation of sentinel lymph nodes (SLN's) against surrounding structures. Additionally, SPECT/CT has the potential to detect more SLN's which might harbour occult disease, than LS. SPECT/CT is recommended to be used routinely, although SPECT/CT is not indispensable for successful SNB.Entities:
Year: 2010 PMID: 21490726 PMCID: PMC3065910 DOI: 10.1155/2011/106068
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Imaging ISSN: 2090-1720
Figure 164-year-old female suffering from a left-sided tongue cancer. (a) shows the MIP (maximum intensity projection)—image of SPECT acquisition in anteroposterior view. A large uptake is seen at the injection site with a small, focal uptake of the left lower boarder (cross hair). (b) shows a fused coronal SPECT/CT image that localises the small focal uptake in the neck region level IIA/B. (c) shows the axial SPECT image with the corresponding cross hair in the sentinel node with a clear delineation from the injection site. (d) shows the corresponding low-dose CT scan localising the uptake by linked cross hair into the neck level IIA/B.
An overview of various studies using SPECT/CT in the context of lymphatic mapping for SNB in OSCC.
| Study group | Number of patients (n) | SPECT/CT and the reported detection of SLN's | The value of SPECT/CT according to the authors |
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| Even-Sapir et al. [ | 6 | 3 additional nodes detected in 6 patients compared to lymphoscintigraphy alone | SPECT/CT adds data that is of clinical relevance to SNB in patients with mucosal HNSCC |
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| Lopez et al. [ | 10 | 100% visualization of the SLN's by SPECT/CT | SPECT/CT is shown to be an effective method for anatomic localization of the SLN's in N0 OSCC |
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| Wagner et al. [ | 30 | 11 additional nodes out of 49 SLNs detected compared to lymphoscintigraphy alone | SPECT/CT adds additional information regarding nodes that are adjacent to the primary lesion |
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| Thomsen et al. [ | 40 | SPECT/CT and/or added oblique images revealed extra nodes in 15/40 patients. | SPECT/CT has added information which could not have been obtained from planar lymphoscintigraphy |
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| Terada et al. [ | 15 | 100% visualization of the SLN's by SPECT/CT | SPECT/CT proved to be an easy, accurate, and reliable method |
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| Khafif et al. [ | 20 | SPECT/CT improved SLN identification and/or localization compared with planar images in 6 patients (30%) | SPECT/CT provides additional preoperative data of clinical relevance to SNB in patients with OSCC |
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| Bilde et al. [ | 34 | SPECT/CT demonstrated extra SLN's compared to planar imaging in 15 out of 32 patients (47%) | SPECT/CT detects more SLN's than lymphoscintigraphy and provides additional anatomical and spatial information about their localization. |
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| Keski-Säntti et al. [ | 15 | 1 additional SLN located in the jugular chain detected compared to lymphoscintigraphy alone | SPECT/CT enables more accurate localization of the SLN's, but it rarely reveals SLN's, that are not detected on planar images. |
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| Haerle et al. [ | 58 | 11 additional hot spots could be revealed by SPECT/CT compared to lymphoscintigraphy alone. In one case even with additional occult disease. | SPECT/CT has the potential to detect more SLN's, which might harbour occult disease, than lymphoscintigraphy alone. |
SNB: sentinel node biopsy; OSCC: oral/oropharyngeal squamous cell carcinoma; HNSCC: head and neck squamous cell carcinoma; SLN: sentinel lymph node.