Jao Mei-Shan, Chang Ting-Chang, Chang Hsiu-Ping, Wu Tzu-I, Chao Angel, Lai Chyong-Huey
Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Chang Gung Memorial Hospital and Chang Gung University College of Medicine, Taoyuan, Taiwan.
J Obstet Gynaecol Res. 2010 Oct;36(5):1003-8. doi: 10.1111/j.1447-0756.2010.01258.x. Epub 2010 Sep 16.
We aimed to define the long-term follow-up results in cervical cancer patients with unexplained squamous cell carcinoma antigen (SCC-Ag) elevation (negative conventional imaging studies, computed tomography or magnetic resonance imaging) after definitive treatment using positron emission tomography (PET).
Of the 27 women with unexplained SCC-Ag elevation, 13 died or were alive with disease (12 PET true-positive, one PET false-negative) in our previous report. In this study, we reported long-term follow-up results for all the 14 patients remaining cancer-free at cut-off of our previous analysis (seven with true-negative PET and two with false-positive PET, and five with true-positive PET having received successful curative salvage therapy).
The seven patients with true-negative PET studies remained recurrence-free (median follow up, 70 months; range, 11-84). Two patients had pelvic inflammatory disease; their SCC-Ag levels returned to the normal range after eradication of infection. Two other patients had recurrent cystitis, and their SCC-Ag levels normalized at 5 and 36 months, respectively. The two patients with false-positive PET/computed tomography were disease-free 73.5 and 70 months from original PET studies, respectively. In contrast, of the five patients with successful salvage, two are alive without disease (at 80 and 86.7 months), one died of radiation cystitis at 54 months, and two died of their cancer subsequent to previous analysis.
Cystitis or pelvic inflammatory disease may cause unexplained elevation of SCC-Ag after definitive treatment. A negative PET study usually indicates absence of disease. PET is a useful tool to identify curable recurrences, especially when SCC-Ag < 4 ng/mL.
我们旨在明确接受正电子发射断层扫描(PET)进行根治性治疗后,鳞状细胞癌抗原(SCC-Ag)不明原因升高(传统影像学检查,计算机断层扫描或磁共振成像为阴性)的宫颈癌患者的长期随访结果。
在我们之前的报告中,27例SCC-Ag不明原因升高的女性患者中,13例死亡或疾病存活(12例PET真阳性,1例PET假阴性)。在本研究中,我们报告了在我们之前分析的截止点时仍无癌的所有14例患者的长期随访结果(7例PET真阴性,2例PET假阳性,5例PET真阳性且接受了成功的根治性挽救治疗)。
7例PET检查为真阴性的患者仍无复发(中位随访时间70个月;范围11 - 84个月)。2例患者患有盆腔炎;感染根除后其SCC-Ag水平恢复正常范围。另外2例患者患有复发性膀胱炎,其SCC-Ag水平分别在5个月和36个月时恢复正常。2例PET/计算机断层扫描假阳性的患者分别在距原始PET检查73.5个月和70个月时无疾病。相比之下,5例成功挽救的患者中,2例存活且无疾病(分别为80个月和86.7个月),1例在54个月时死于放射性膀胱炎,2例在之前分析后死于癌症。
膀胱炎或盆腔炎可能导致根治性治疗后SCC-Ag不明原因升高。PET检查阴性通常表明无疾病。PET是识别可治愈复发的有用工具,尤其是当SCC-Ag < 4 ng/mL时。