| Literature DB >> 34286178 |
Lena Sophie Kiefer1, Julia Sekler1, Brigitte Gückel1, Mareen Sarah Kraus1, Christian la Fougère2, Konstantin Nikolaou1, Michael Bitzer3, Sergios Gatidis1, Christina Pfannenberg1.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To determine the impact of 18F-FDG-PET/CT on clinical management of patients with cholangiocellular carcinoma (CCA).Entities:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34286178 PMCID: PMC8256695 DOI: 10.1259/bjro.20210008
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BJR Open ISSN: 2513-9878
Figure 1.Definition of changes in clinical management in patients with CCA.
Patient demographics and characteristics
| female | 12 | 44.4 |
| male | 15 | 55.6 |
| mean | 60.0 | |
| median | 62.0 | |
| interquartile range (first and third Quartile) | 51.5–67.5 | |
| inpatients | 24 | 88.9 |
| outpatients | 3 | 11.1 |
| CT | 17 | 39.5 |
| MRI | 17 | 39.5 |
| PET/CT | 7 | 16.3 |
| not documented | 2 | 4.7 |
| mean | 63.6 | |
| median | 34.0 | |
| interquartile range (first and third Quartile) | 15.0–83.0 | |
| one | 14 | 51.9 |
| two | 10 | 37.0 |
| three | 3 | 11.1 |
| iCCA | 15 | 55.6 |
| eCCA | 12 | 44.4 |
| hilar (Klatskin tumor) | 7 | |
| distal bile duct | 5 | |
CCA: Cholangiocarcinoma
PET/CT indications
| Indication for PET/CTa | ||
| diagnosis (without prior biopsy) | 2 | 4.7 |
| staging | 20 | 46.5 |
| primary staging | 2 | |
| re-staging after therapyb | 18 | |
| interval monitoring | 3 | |
| residual tumor & vitality | 5 | |
| therapy response | 11 | |
| suspected recurrencec d | 21 | 48.8 |
| new lesion in preceding imaging | 17 | |
| laboratory & tumor markers | 10 | |
CCA, Cholangiocarcinoma.
PET/CT indications: diagnosis (suspected primary), staging (primary staging and re-staging after therapy of histologically confirmed cancer), and suspected recurrence of previously treated cancer
of 18 cases re-staging after last documented therapy: 13 cases during/after chemotherapy, two cases after (re-) surgery, two cases after TACE, and one case after radiation therapy
of 21 cases with suspected recurrence (last documented therapy): 19 cases after chemotherapy, one case after re-surgery, and one case after radiation therapy
multiple selection possible
Figure 4.Survival of 27 patients with CCA after the first 18F-FDG-PET/CT examination. A Overall survival of all 27 patients (mean survival time after first 18F-FDG-PET/CT examination: 1.81 years (95% CI 1.29–2.34 years)). B Overall survival after first 18F-FDG-PET/CT examination of patients in whom a “curative treatment” regimen was intended after PET/CT (N = 6) (mean survival time: 2.21 years (95% CI 0.76–3.66 years), and in whom a “palliative treatment” regimen was intended after PET/CT (N = 12) (mean survival time: 1.21 years (95% CI 0.72–1.69 years).
Figure 5.Example of a 36-year-old female patient with recurrent CCA in the left liver lobe after right hemihepatectomy and systemic chemotherapy (gemcitabine/cisplatin), not detected on CT and MRI. Recurrence was suspected clinically by elevated tumor markers (CA 19.9). Before PET/CT, clinicians intended further imaging and biopsy to prove suspected recurrence, and revised their “non-treatment” strategy into a “palliative treatment” goal (with change of chemotherapy regimen) after PET/CT (major change).
Impact of 18F-FDG-PET/CT on intended clinical management stratified generally as “treatment” vs “non-treatment” (N = 43)
| Indication for PET/CT | All Patients | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Management plan | Pre-PET/CT | Post-PET/CT | Diagnosis | Staging | Recurrence | |
| No. of scans per indication (%) | 2 (4.7%) | 20 (46.5%) | 21 (48.8%) | 43 (100%) | ||
| Treatmenta | Treatmenta | - | 6 (14%) | 1 (2.3%) | 7 (16.3%) | |
| Non-treatmentb | Non-treatmentb | - | 3 (7.0%) | 7 (16.3%) | 10 (23.3%) | |
| Non-treatmentb | Treatmenta | - | 10 (23.3%) | 7 (16.3%) | 17 (39.5%) | |
| Treatmenta | Non-treatmentb | 2 (4.7%) | 1 (2.3%) | 6 (14.0%) | 9 (20.9%) | |
| Change in clinical patient management | 2 (100%) | 11 (55%) | 13 (61.9%) | 26 (60.5%) | ||
| 95% confidence interval | 32.0–78.0% | 40.5–83.3% | 45.5–75.5% | |||
Treatment: surgical resection, liver transplantation, systemic chemotherapy, TACE, radiation therapy, and combinations.
Non-treatment: watchful waiting, and additional diagnostic tests (e.g., imaging, biopsy).
Impact of 18F-FDG-PET/CT on intended clinical management stratified by treatment goal (“curative” and “palliative treatment”) (N = 43)
| Management plan | Change in management* | No. of scans (%) | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Pre-PET/CT | Post-PET/CT | ||
| Curative | Curative | No changea | 2 (4.7%) |
| Palliative | Major changeb | - | |
| Non-treatment | Major changec | 4 (9.3%) | |
| Palliative | Curative | Major changeb | 1 (2.3%) |
| Palliative | No changea | 3 (7.0%) | |
| Non-treatment | Major changec | 5 (11.6%) | |
| Non-treatment | Curative | Major changec | 4 (9.3%) |
| Palliative | Major changec | 13 (30.2%) | |
| Non-treatment | No changea | 3 (7.0%) | |
| Overall change in clinical management | 35 (81.4%) | ||
| Major change1 & 2 | 27 | ||
| Minor change3 & 4 | 8 | ||
| 8 (18.6%) | |||
no change: identical pre- and post-PET/CT clinical management
major change in therapy goal (“curative” vs “palliative treatment”)
major change in clinical management (“non-treatment” vs “treatment”)
minor change among therapies (** including change in chemotherapy regimen)
minor change in non-treatment (*including change in imaging test)
based on definitions of no change, minor and major change in clinical management in patients with CCA (also see Figure 1):