Lind Peter, Igerc Isabel, Beyer Thomas, Reinprecht Peter, Hausegger Klaus
Department of Nuclear Medicine and Endocrinology, PET/CT Center, LKH Klagenfurt, St. Veiterstrasse 47, 9020 Klagenfurt, Austria.
Eur J Nucl Med Mol Imaging. 2004 Jun;31 Suppl 1:S125-34. doi: 10.1007/s00259-004-1535-8. Epub 2004 Apr 15.
18F-Fluoro-2-deoxy-D-glucose positron emission tomography (FDG PET) has been evaluated in breast cancer for the characterisation of primary tumours, lymph node staging and the follow-up of patients after surgery, chemotherapy and/or external radiotherapy. In contrast to both the low sensitivity and moderate specificity of FDG PET in the initial detection and characterisation of breast cancer and the low lesion-based sensitivity for lymph node staging, the results from use of FDG PET in re-staging breast cancer patients are very promising. A major advantage of FDG PET imaging compared with conventional imaging is that it screens the entire patient for local recurrence, lymph node metastases and distant metastases during a single whole-body examination using a single injection of activity, with a reported average sensitivity and specificity of 96% and 77%, respectively. In most studies the sensitivity of FDG PET is higher than that of a combination of conventional imaging methods. Limitations of FDG PET in the follow-up of breast cancer patients include the relatively low detection rate of bone metastases, especially in case of the sclerotic subtype, and the relatively high rate of false positive results. The rather low specificity of FDG PET can be improved/increased by utilising combined anatomical-molecular imaging techniques, such as a PET/CT tomograph. First results using PET/CT imaging in the follow-up of breast cancer patients demonstrate increased specificity compared with FDG PET alone. Both imaging modalities, however, offer to detect recurrent and metastatic breast cancer disease at an early stage and thus continue to demonstrate the efficacy of molecular imaging in patient management, despite the limited therapeutic options in recurrent and metastatic breast cancer.
18F-氟-2-脱氧-D-葡萄糖正电子发射断层扫描(FDG PET)已在乳腺癌中用于原发性肿瘤的特征描述、淋巴结分期以及手术、化疗和/或外照射放疗后患者的随访。与FDG PET在乳腺癌初始检测和特征描述中的低敏感性和中等特异性以及基于病灶的淋巴结分期低敏感性相反,FDG PET在乳腺癌患者再分期中的应用结果非常有前景。与传统成像相比,FDG PET成像的一个主要优势在于,通过单次注射放射性示踪剂进行全身检查,可对整个患者进行局部复发、淋巴结转移和远处转移的筛查,据报道其平均敏感性和特异性分别为96%和77%。在大多数研究中,FDG PET的敏感性高于传统成像方法的联合应用。FDG PET在乳腺癌患者随访中的局限性包括骨转移的检出率相对较低,尤其是硬化亚型,以及假阳性结果的发生率相对较高。通过利用联合解剖-分子成像技术,如PET/CT断层扫描仪,可以提高FDG PET相对较低的特异性。乳腺癌患者随访中使用PET/CT成像的初步结果表明,与单独使用FDG PET相比,特异性有所提高。然而,尽管复发和转移性乳腺癌的治疗选择有限,但这两种成像方式都能够在早期检测出复发性和转移性乳腺癌疾病,从而继续证明分子成像在患者管理中的有效性。