Literature DB >> 27536906

Prospective comparison of whole-body bone SPECT and sodium 18F-fluoride PET in the detection of bone metastases from breast cancer.

Gad Abikhzer1, Saher Srour, Georgeta Fried, Karen Drumea, Ela Kozlener, Alex Frenkel, Ora Israel, Ignac Fogelman, Olga Kagna.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: The superiority of sodium F-fluoride PET (F-PET)/computed tomography (CT) over planar and single field-of-view single-photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) bone scintigraphy with Tc-methylene diphosphonate in bone metastases detection has been established. The present study prospectively compares whole-body Tc-methylene diphosphonate SPECT (WB-SPECT) and F-PET performance indices for the detection of bone metastases in breast cancer.
METHODS: A total of 41 pairs of studies in female breast cancer patients (average age 58 years, range 30-75) were included. Half-time WB-SPECT and F-PET/CT were performed at a 4-day average interval (range 0-36 days), with subsequent fusion of CT to WB-SPECT. Two readers independently interpreted the studies, with differences resolved by consensus. Composite gold standard included the CT component of the F-PET/CT study with follow-up CT, MRI, F-fluoro-deoxyglucose-PET/CT, and bone scans.
RESULTS: On patient-based analysis, metastases were diagnosed in 21 patients, with 19 patients detected by WB-SPECT and 21 with F-PET, the latter being the only modality to detect a single metastasis in two patients. The sensitivity of WB-SPECT and F-PET was 90 and 100% (P=NS), and the specificity were 95 and 85%, respectively (P=NS). On lesion-based analysis, 284 total sites of increased uptake were found. WB-SPECT detected 171/284 (60%) and F-PET 268/284 (94%) lesions, with good interobserver agreement for WB-SPECT (κ=0.679) and excellent agreement for F-PET (κ=0.798). The final analysis classified 204 lesions as benign and 80 as metastases. WB-SPECT identified 121 benign and 50 malignant sites compared with 192 and 76, respectively, for F-PET. WB-SPECT and F-PET had a sensitivity of 63 vs. 95%, P-value of less than 0.001, and a specificity of 97 vs. 96% (P=NS), respectively, on lesion-based analysis.
CONCLUSION: F-PET had higher sensitivity for the diagnosis of bone metastases from breast cancer compared with WB-SPECT, showing a statistically significant 32% increase on lesion-based analysis.

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Year:  2016        PMID: 27536906     DOI: 10.1097/MNM.0000000000000568

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Nucl Med Commun        ISSN: 0143-3636            Impact factor:   1.690


  6 in total

Review 1.  Therapy assessment of bone metastatic disease in the era of 223radium.

Authors:  Elba Etchebehere; Ana Emilia Brito; Alireza Rezaee; Werner Langsteger; Mohsen Beheshti
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2.  Clinical value of dual-phase F-18 sodium fluoride PET/CT for diagnosing bone metastasis in cancer patients with solitary bone lesion.

Authors:  Jeong Won Lee; Yong-Jin Park; Youn Soo Jeon; Ki Hong Kim; Jong Eun Lee; Sung Hoon Hong; Sang Mi Lee; Su Jin Jang
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Review 4.  [The role of molecular imaging (PET-CT) in the diagnostic and treatment pf prostate cancer].

Authors:  Siroos Mirzaei; Peter Knoll; Shahin Zandieh
Journal:  Wien Med Wochenschr       Date:  2018-10-22

5.  Prospective Study of Serial 18F-FDG PET and 18F-Fluoride PET to Predict Time to Skeletal-Related Events, Time to Progression, and Survival in Patients with Bone-Dominant Metastatic Breast Cancer.

Authors:  Lanell M Peterson; Janet O'Sullivan; Qian Vicky Wu; Alena Novakova-Jiresova; Isaac Jenkins; Jean H Lee; Andrew Shields; Susan Montgomery; Hannah M Linden; Julie Gralow; Vijayakrishna K Gadi; Mark Muzi; Paul Kinahan; David Mankoff; Jennifer M Specht
Journal:  J Nucl Med       Date:  2018-05-10       Impact factor: 10.057

6.  FDG avid breast cancer bone metastases silent on CT and scintigraphy: a case report with radiologic-pathologic correlation.

Authors:  Daniel Jeong; Marilyn Bui; Daniel Peterson; Jaime Montilla-Soler; Kenneth L Gage
Journal:  Acta Radiol Open       Date:  2017-10-06
  6 in total

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