| Literature DB >> 28918564 |
Yihan Yang1, Mike Z He2, Tao Li1, Xuejun Yang3.
Abstract
Based on studies focusing on positron emission tomography (PET)-computed tomography (CT) combined with magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) in the diagnosis of glioma, we conducted a systematic review and meta-analysis evaluating the pros and cons and the accuracy of different examinations. PubMed and Cochrane Library were searched. The search was conducted until April 2017. Two reviewers independently conducted the literature search according to the criteria set initially. Based on the exclusion criteria, 15 articles are included in this study. Of all studies that used MRI examination, there are five involving 18F-fluorodeoxyglucose-PET, five involving 11C-methionine-PET, five involving 18F-fluoro-ethyl-tyrosine-PET, and three involving 18F-fluorothymidine-PET. Due to the limitations such as lack of data, small sample size, and unrepresentative studies, we use a non-quantitative methodology. MRI examination can provide the anatomy information of glioma more clearly. PET-CT examinations based on tumor metabolism using different tracers have more advantages in determining the degree of glioma malignancy and boundaries. However, information provided by PET-CT of different tracers is not the same. With respect to the novel hybrid MRI/PET examination equipment proposed in recent years, the combination of MRI and PET-CT can definitively improve the diagnostic accuracy of glioma.Entities:
Keywords: Diagnostic accuracy; Glioma; MRI; PET-CT
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28918564 PMCID: PMC6503074 DOI: 10.1007/s10143-017-0906-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Neurosurg Rev ISSN: 0344-5607 Impact factor: 3.042
Fig. 1Flow diagram of the study selection process
Included studies
| Authors and year | PET tracer | Subjects | Glioma type | Patients received therapy before |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bšelohlávek et al., 2002 | 18F-FDG | 29 | LGG, HGG | + |
| Pauleit et al., 2005 | 18F-FET | 28 | WHO grade I~IV | – |
| Walter et al., 2005 | 18F-FET | 45 | WHO grade I~IV | + |
| Pirotte et al., 2006 | 11C-MET, 18F-FDG | 103 | LGG, HGG | – |
| Mira et al., 2004 | 11C-MET | 10 | GBM | – |
| Yamamoto et al., 2006 | 18F-FLT | 10 | GBM (recurrent) | + |
| Galldiks et al., 2010 | 11C-MET | 12 | Glioblastoma | + |
| Ewelt et al., 2011 | 18F-FET | 30 | WHO grade II~IV | – |
| Santra et al., 2012 | 18F-FDG | 90 | WHO grade I~IV | + |
| Arbizu et al., 2012 | 11C-MET | 23 | WHO grade II~IV | +/− |
| Jansen et al., 2012 | 18F-FET | 127 | WHO grade I~IV | – |
| Singhal et al., 2012 | 11C-MET, 18F-FDG | 102 | WHO grade I~IV | NA |
| Nowosielski et al., 2014 | 18F-FET, 18F-FLT | 23 | WHO grade III, IV | – |
| Zhao et al., 2015 | 18F-FLT | 19 | WHO grade III, IV | + |
| Song et al., 2016 | 18F-FDG | 70 | NA | – |
NA = not available
Data of researches
| Average sensitivity/SD | Average specificity/SD | Average accuracy/SD | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| MRI | Overall | 95.5%/0.99% | 90.05%/6.75% | 74.9%/8.38% |
| LGG | 67.57%/42.38% | 26.2%/7.56% | 63%/4% | |
| HGG | 82.67%/14.41% | 50.2%/29.96% | 76.5%/9.5% | |
| 18F-FDG-PET | Overall | 66%/3.5% | 90.05%/6.75% | 70.9%/6.44% |
| LGG | 65%/25% | 100%/0 | 81%/14% | |
| HGG | 63.2%/9.42% | 88.87%/7.87% | 66.75%/4.25% | |
| 11C-MET-PET | NA/NA | NA/NA | 72%/NA | |
| 18F-FET-PET | Overall | 92%/NA | 81%/NA | NA/NA |
| LGG | 66.35%/12.55% | 11.8%/NA | NA/NA | |
| HGG | 93.05%/4.85% | 46.1%/NA | NA/NA | |
| 18F-FLT-PET | NA/NA | NA/NA | NA/NA |
SD = standard deviation; LGG = low-grade glioma; HGG = high-grade glioma; NA = not available
Features of conventional MRI and different PET-CTs
| Imaging mechanism | Function | Characteristics | Shortcomings | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Conventional MRI (including enhanced MRI) | Magnetic resonance | Showing the anatomical structure of glioma; providing preliminary information on the glioma boundary | Showing the anatomical structures clearly | The boundary of glioma shown is smaller than the biological boundary especially in higher grade glioma |
| 18F-FDG PET-CT | Glucose metabolism of glioma cells | Showing the degree of metabolic activity of glioma; predicting the grade of glioma | Showing necrotic tissue | Normal brain tissue may also have high tracer uptake |
| 11C-MET PET-CT | Amino acid metabolism of glioma cells | Showing glioma boundary; showing the degree of metabolic activity of glioma; predicting the grade of glioma | Showing a glioma boundary closer to the biological boundary | Relatively short half-life time |
| 18F-FET PET-CT | Amino acid metabolism of glioma cells | Diagnosing glioma; predicting the grade of glioma | Relatively higher diagnosing accuracy of malignant glioma than conventional MRI | Blood-brain barrier damage leads to increased uptake |
| 18F-FLT PET-CT | Nucleic acid metabolism of glioma cells | Showing glioma boundary | Showing a glioma boundary closer to the biological boundary than conventional MRI | Imaging depends on the blood-brain barrier damage; it is poor to show low-grade glioma |