| Literature DB >> 28962139 |
Shan Lang1, Junping Sun1, Xuning Wang2, Yongjiu Xiao1, Juan Wang1, Mingyue Zhang1, Ting Ao1, Jianxin Wang1.
Abstract
Asymptomatic pulmonary tuberculosis (PTB) mimicking lung cancer is rare and has been documented in few studies. Accurately diagnosing this atypical disease remains an enormous challenge for clinicians. The aim of the present study was to characterize asymptomatic patients with PTB who were initially diagnosed with lung cancer according to their chest computer tomography (CT) or whole-body 18F-fludeoxyglucose-positron emission tomography-computer tomography (PET-CT) presentations. The clinical characteristics and radiographic features of patients with PTB were analyzed and compared to those of patients with lung cancer. In patients with PTB, all lesions exhibited suspected malignant signs on chest CT and the maximum standard uptake value (SUVmax) of PET-CT imaging was between 2.65 and 10.9. Compared with lung cancer, the factors associated with PTB included an age <60 years (82% vs. 46%, P=0.03), being male (77% vs. 51%, P=0.025), the presence of diabetes (55% vs. 16%, P<0.01), spiculated margins (82% vs. 44%, P=0.002) and a lower SUVmax (P=0.036). The optimal cut-off level was SUVmax 8.45 for discriminating between PTB and lung cancer. At this point, the sensitivity and specificity were 63.0 and 88.9%, respectively. The results of the current study revealed methods of distinguishing between the two similar diseases. Furthermore, the results of the current study may increase awareness that although imaging of lesions may resemble lung cancer, a diagnosis of PTB should be considered. Accurate diagnosis of PTB would mean that patients would be able to avoid undergoing unnecessary operations that induce a high financial burden.Entities:
Keywords: clinical characteristics; computed tomography; early diagnosis; lung cancer; positron emission tomography; pulmonary tuberculosis
Year: 2017 PMID: 28962139 PMCID: PMC5609136 DOI: 10.3892/etm.2017.4737
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Exp Ther Med ISSN: 1792-0981 Impact factor: 2.447
Figure 1.Study flow chart.
Clinical characteristics and imaging features of the 22 patients with PTB.
| No./age/sex | Smoking (years/cigarettes per day) | Diabetes | Largest size (cm) | Location of lesion | Type of biopsy | CT presentation | PET (SUVmax) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1/41/M | 20/20 | Yes | 2.8 | RUL | Pulmonary lobectomy | Ground-glass shadow, spiculated margin, lobulation, vacuole | 2.65 |
| 2/41/M | 20/40 | Yes | 2.5 | RUL | Pulmonary lobectomy | Spiculated margin, vacuole | 8.4 |
| 3/64/M | 20/60 | Yes | 5 | RUL | Pulmonary lobectomy | Spiculated margin, lobulation, pleural indentation | – |
| 4/51/M | 30/50 | Yes | 2.5 | RUL | Pulmonary lobectomy | Spiculated margin, lobulation | – |
| 5/43/F | No | No | 2.6 | RML | Pulmonary lobectomy | Spiculated margin, blood vessel convergency | – |
| 6/50/M | No | Yes | 1.2 | LUL | PTNB | Ground-glass shadow | – |
| 7/59/M | 30/20 | Yes | 2 | LUL | Pulmonary lobectomy | Pleural indentation, vacuole | – |
| 8/55/F | No | No | 1.6 | RUL | TBLB | Spiculated margin, lobulation | 10.9 |
| 9/61/M | 15/40 | Yes | 3.2 | RML | Pulmonary lobectomy | Spiculated margin, lobulation, pleural indentation, cavity | – |
| 10/57/M | No | Yes | 2.3 | RUL | Pulmonary lobectomy | Spiculated margin, lobulation, pleural indentation | 7.7 |
| 11/68/M | 50/20 | Yes | 4 | LUL | Pulmonary lobectomy | Spiculated margin, lobulation, pleural indentation | – |
| 12/39/M | No | No | 1.3 | LUL | Pulmonary lobectomy | Spiculated margin, lobulation | 5.4 |
| 13/72/M | No | No | 1 | RML | Pulmonary lobectomy | Spiculated margin, lobulation | 3.16 |
| 14/63/M | 35/20 | Yes | 1.8 | LUL | Pulmonary lobectomy | Spiculated margin, pleural indentation, blood vessel convergency | – |
| 15/51/F | No | Yes | 3 | LUL | Pulmonary lobectomy | Spiculated margin, lobulation | 4.2 |
| 16/59/M | No | Yes | 2.5 | LLL | Pulmonary lobectomy | Spiculated margin, lobulation, cavity, ground-glass shadow | – |
| 17/56/M | 40/20 | No | 1.5 | LLL | Pulmonary lobectomy | Spiculated margin, lobulation, blood vessel convergency | – |
| 18/41/F | 40/20 | No | 3.5 | RUL | Pulmonary lobectomy | Spiculated margin, vacuole | 6.5 |
| 19/59/M | No | No | 2.7 | RUL | PTNB | Spiculated margin, lobulation, cavity | – |
| 20/36/F | No | No | 2.4 | RUL | Pulmonary lobectomy | Spiculated margin, pleural indentation | – |
| 21/47/M | 10/20 | No | 3.5 | RUL | Pulmonary lobectomy | Lobulation, vacuole | – |
| 22/57/M | 20/40 | No | 2.5 | LUL | Pulmonary lobectomy | Lobulation, blood vessel convergency, pleural indentation | 5.02 |
No, patient number; M, male; F, female; SUVmax, maximum standard uptake value; LUL, left upper lobe; LLL, left lower lobe; RUL, right upper lobe; RML, right middle lobe; PTNB, percutaneous transthoracic needle biopsy; TBLB, transbronchial lung biopsy; PET, 18F-fludeoxyglucose-positron emission tomography.
Figure 2.Representative chest computed tomography presentations of asymptomatic pulmonary tuberculosis mimicking lung cancer. Lesions in the 4 cases (from 4 different patients) exhibited the suspected malignant signs of lung cancer including (A) spiculated margins, pleural indentation (B) lobulation, spiculated margins, pleural indentation (C) blood vessel convergency, spiculated margain, pleural indentation (D) pleural indentation and lobulation.
Clinical and radiological finding in patients with PTB vs. those with lung cancer.
| Total, no. (%) | Tuberculosis, no. (%) | Lung cancer, no. (%) | P-value | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| No. | 103 | 22 | 81 | |
| Age, years | 0.003[ | |||
| <60 | 55 | 18 | 37 | |
| ≥60 | 48 | 4 | 44 | |
| Sex | 0.025[ | |||
| Male | 58 | 17 | 41 | |
| Female | 45 | 5 | 40 | |
| Smoking history | 0.247 | |||
| Smoker | 45 | 12 | 33 | |
| Never smoked | 58 | 10 | 48 | |
| Underlying diseases | <0.001[ | |||
| Diabetes | 25 | 12 | 13 | |
| Non-diabetes | 78 | 10 | 68 | |
| Location of lesion | 0.175 | |||
| Upper lobe | 67 | 17 | 50 | |
| Others | 36 | 5 | 31 | |
| Largest size (cm) | 0.210 | |||
| <2 | 40 | 6 | 34 | |
| ≥2 | 63 | 16 | 47 | |
| CT presentation | ||||
| Spiculated margin | 54 | 18 | 36 | 0.002[ |
| Lobulation | 63 | 15 | 48 | 0.446 |
| Ground-glass shadow | 31 | 3 | 28 | 0.058 |
| Pleural indentation | 38 | 8 | 30 | 0.922 |
| Blood vessel convergency | 25 | 4 | 21 | 0.452 |
| Cavity | 8 | 3 | 5 | 0.477 |
| Vacuole | 13 | 5 | 8 | 0.212 |
| PET (SUVmax) | ||||
| Mean ± SD | 9.06±5.13 | 5.99±2.66 | 10.09±5.38 | 0.036[ |
P<0.05 patients with PTB vs. patients with lung cancer. No, number; PTB, pulmonary tuberculosis; CT, computed tomography; PET, 18F-fludeoxyglucose-positron emission tomography/computer tomography; SUVmax, maximum standard uptake value; SD, standard deviation.
Figure 3.PET-CT imaging of asymptomatic pulmonary tuberculosis mimicking lung cancer. PET-CT revealed a 2.3×1.3 cm lesion with malignancy features and the SUVmax was 7.7 in the right upper lobe. PET-CT, 18F-fludeoxyglucose-positron emission tomography-computer tomography; SUVmax, maximum standard uptake value.
Figure 4.The ROC curve represented the capability of SUVmax to differentiate PTB from lung cancer. ROC, receiver operating characteristic; SUVmax, the maximum standard uptake value.