| Literature DB >> 23823804 |
Ansje Fortuin1, Maarten de Rooij, Patrik Zamecnik, Uwe Haberkorn, Jelle Barentsz.
Abstract
Knowledge on lymph node metastases is crucial for the prognosis and treatment of prostate cancer patients. Conventional anatomic imaging often fails to differentiate benign from metastatic lymph nodes. Pelvic lymph node dissection is an invasive technique and underestimates the extent of lymph node metastases. Therefore, there is a need for more accurate non-invasive diagnostic techniques. Molecular and functional imaging has been subject of research for the last decades, in this respect. Therefore, in this article the value of imaging techniques to detect lymph node metastases is reviewed. These techniques include scintigraphy, sentinel node imaging, positron emission tomography/computed tomography (PET/CT), diffusion weighted magnetic resonance imaging (DWI MRI) and magnetic resonance lymphography (MRL). Knowledge on pathway and size of lymph node metastases has increased with molecular and functional imaging. Furthermore, improved detection and localization of lymph node metastases will enable (focal) treatment of the positive nodes only.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23823804 PMCID: PMC3742221 DOI: 10.3390/ijms140713842
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Figure 118F-choline PET-CT. Patient after radical prostatectomy with slowly increasing PSA (current PSA: 1.5 μg/L). The figure shows series of native CT images (A); PET images 60 min after the administration of 18F-choline (B) and fused PET-CT images (C) in transversal, sagittal and coronal views. The PET images show a small hot spot in the right inguinal region with increased isotope uptake. In the PET-CT fused images this spot can be identified as a small right inguinal lymph node highly suspect for a metastasis. (F: Transverse plane; L: Saggital plane; A: Coronal plane).
Figure 2Ga-PSMA-PET-CT. Patient with prostate cancer (status after brachy-therapy and bilateral iliac lymph node dissection, current PSA 21 μg/L). PET images were acquired after the administration of GA-PSMA-Ligand (60 min thereafter). The figure shows fused images (PET-CT): On the coronal view (A) a pathologic isotope uptake in multiple lymph nodes in the right para-iliac region and infra-carinal (mediastinum) is clearly visible; the corresponding transversal images show the para-iliac (B) and infra-carinal (C) lymph nodes with elevated uptake of the tracer. The corresponding transversal native CT images present these suspect structures (D,E) as normal sized lymph nodes (marked by red arrows).
Figure 3MR-lymphography at 3 Tesla using USPIO. Patient with prostate cancer and lymphatic metastases. Left image shows the morphological T1 weighted coronal sequence with two small lymph nodes near to the left common iliac artery. Right image shows the corresponding T2* weighted coronal image 24 h after the intravenous administration of an USPIO agent (ferumoxtran-10). The lymph node marked by the green circle shows an USPIO uptake and therefore a signal loss in the T2* image suggesting normal lymphatic tissue. The lymph node marked by the red circle does not show any USPIO uptake and therefore shows a bright signal on the T2* image. This lymph node is highly suspect for metastasis.