Maisey N R, Hill M E, Webb A, Cunningham D, Flux G D, Padhani A, Ott R J, Norman A, Bishop L
Department of Medicine, Royal Marsden NHS Trust, Sutton, Surrey, UK.
Eur J Cancer. 2000 Jan;36(2):200-6. doi: 10.1016/s0959-8049(99)00249-x.
Treatment of both Hodgkin's disease (HD) and non-Hodgkin's lymphoma (NHL) frequently results in a residual mass visible radiologically. Such patients may receive radiotherapy unnecessarily because the residual mass may represent benign fibrotic tissue rather than residual active lymphoma. Radiotherapy has been shown to have significant short and more worrying long-term toxicity. Refining the criteria for its use would be a major advance. A number of clinical investigations have been evaluated to more accurately determine the nature of such lesions, including erythrocyte sedimentation rate (ESR), magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and high-dose gallium-67 scanning (HDGS) but none has proven utility. 18[F]-fluorodeoxyglucose positron emission tomography (FDG-PET) is an imaging technique that has been shown to be useful in distinguishing fibrosis from residual active disease in solid tumours. The aim of this study was to compare FDG PET and MRI in the assessment of residual masses following treatment for lymphoma. Patients with NHL/HD who had a residual mass following chemotherapy were eligible for this study. Patients had a combination of MRI and/or PET. All scans were completed within 5 months of the end of treatment. Patients were followed-up for relapse. 56 patients had an MRI scan, 24 had a PET scan and 22 patients had both investigations. Overall sensitivity and specificity, respectively, were for MRI 45% and 74%, PET 50% and 69%, and PET/MRI concurring 50% and 67%. There was a trend for improved relapse-free survival (RFS) with a negative result of both MRI and PET, but this was not statistically significant. The predictive value for both tests failed to reach statistical significance. Subgroup analysis suggests that PET may be better at predicting relapse in patients with NHL, especially those with masses above the diaphragm. There is no convincing evidence that either MRI or PET or the combination can reliably predict relapse within residual masses after treatment for lymphoma. A negative PET scan however appears to be more informative than a positive result and may well aid clinical decision making. There are a number of factors that may produce false-positive results, including post-treatment inflammatory changes, the sensitivity of the test in the setting of minimal residual disease and the heterogeneity of the histological subtypes studied. A negative PET (or MRI) result in lymphoma residual masses following therapy may negate the necessity for further therapy such as chemotherapy or radiotherapy and their concomitant toxicities.
霍奇金淋巴瘤(HD)和非霍奇金淋巴瘤(NHL)的治疗常常会导致放射影像学上可见残留肿块。这类患者可能会不必要地接受放疗,因为残留肿块可能代表良性纤维化组织而非残留的活动性淋巴瘤。放疗已被证明具有显著的短期毒性,更令人担忧的是长期毒性。完善其使用标准将是一项重大进展。已经评估了多项临床研究,以更准确地确定此类病变的性质,包括红细胞沉降率(ESR)、磁共振成像(MRI)和高剂量镓-67扫描(HDGS),但均未证明其有用性。18[F]-氟脱氧葡萄糖正电子发射断层扫描(FDG-PET)是一种成像技术,已被证明可用于区分实体瘤中的纤维化与残留的活动性疾病。本研究的目的是比较FDG PET和MRI在淋巴瘤治疗后残留肿块评估中的作用。化疗后有残留肿块的NHL/HD患者符合本研究条件。患者接受了MRI和/或PET检查。所有扫描均在治疗结束后5个月内完成。对患者进行复发随访。56例患者进行了MRI扫描,24例进行了PET扫描,22例患者同时进行了两项检查。总体敏感性和特异性方面,MRI分别为45%和74%,PET为50%和69%,PET/MRI结果一致时为50%和67%。MRI和PET结果均为阴性时,无复发生存期(RFS)有改善趋势,但无统计学意义。两种检查的预测价值均未达到统计学意义。亚组分析表明,PET在预测NHL患者复发方面可能更好,尤其是横膈以上有肿块的患者。没有令人信服的证据表明MRI或PET或两者结合能够可靠地预测淋巴瘤治疗后残留肿块内的复发。然而,PET扫描阴性似乎比阳性结果更具信息价值,可能有助于临床决策。有许多因素可能产生假阳性结果,包括治疗后的炎症变化、检测在微小残留病情况下的敏感性以及所研究组织学亚型的异质性。淋巴瘤治疗后残留肿块的PET(或MRI)结果为阴性可能排除进一步治疗(如化疗或放疗)及其伴随毒性的必要性。