Tantiwongkosi Bundhit, Yu Fang, Kanard Anand, Miller Frank R
Bundhit Tantiwongkosi, Division of Neuroradiology, Department of Radiology and Otolaryngology Head Neck Surgery, University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio, San Antonio, TX 78229, United States.
World J Radiol. 2014 May 28;6(5):177-91. doi: 10.4329/wjr.v6.i5.177.
Head and neck cancer (HNC) ranks as the 6(th) most common cancer worldwide, with the vast majority being head and neck squamous cell carcinoma (HNSCC). The majority of patients present with complicated locally advanced disease (typically stage III and IV) requiring multidisciplinary treatment plans with combinations of surgery, radiation therapy and chemotherapy. Tumor staging is critical to decide therapeutic planning. Multiple challenges include accurate tumor localization with precise delineation of tumor volume, cervical lymph node staging, detection of distant metastasis as well as ruling out synchronous second primary tumors. Some patients present with cervical lymph node metastasis without obvious primary tumors on clinical examination or conventional cross sectional imaging. Treatment planning includes surgery, radiation, chemotherapy or combinations that could significantly alter the anatomy and physiology of this complex head and neck region, making assessment of treatment response and detection of residual/ recurrent tumor very difficult by clinical evaluation and computed tomography (CT) or magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). (18)F-2-fluoro-2-deoxy-D-glucose positron emission tomography/CT ((18)F-FDG PET/CT) has been widely used to assess HNC for more than a decade with high diagnostic accuracy especially in detection of initial distant metastasis and evaluation of treatment response. There are some limitations that are unique to PET/CT including artifacts, lower soft tissue contrast and resolution as compared to MRI, false positivity in post-treatment phase due to inflammation and granulation tissues, etc. The aim of this article is to review the roles of PET/CT in both pre and post treatment management of HNSCC including its limitations that radiologists must know. Accurate PET/CT interpretation is the crucial initial step that leads to appropriate tumor staging and treatment planning.
头颈癌(HNC)是全球第六大常见癌症,其中绝大多数为头颈部鳞状细胞癌(HNSCC)。大多数患者表现为复杂的局部晚期疾病(通常为III期和IV期),需要手术、放疗和化疗相结合的多学科治疗方案。肿瘤分期对于决定治疗方案至关重要。多个挑战包括准确的肿瘤定位以及精确勾勒肿瘤体积、颈部淋巴结分期、检测远处转移以及排除同步性第二原发肿瘤。一些患者在临床检查或传统横断面成像中没有明显原发肿瘤,但却出现颈部淋巴结转移。治疗方案包括手术、放疗、化疗或联合治疗,这些治疗可能会显著改变这个复杂头颈部区域的解剖结构和生理功能,使得通过临床评估以及计算机断层扫描(CT)或磁共振成像(MRI)来评估治疗反应和检测残留/复发性肿瘤变得非常困难。氟代脱氧葡萄糖正电子发射断层显像/计算机断层扫描(¹⁸F-FDG PET/CT)已广泛用于评估头颈癌超过十年,具有很高的诊断准确性,尤其是在检测初始远处转移和评估治疗反应方面。PET/CT存在一些独特的局限性,包括伪影、与MRI相比软组织对比度和分辨率较低、治疗后阶段因炎症和肉芽组织导致的假阳性等。本文的目的是综述PET/CT在HNSCC治疗前和治疗后管理中的作用,包括放射科医生必须了解的其局限性。准确解读PET/CT是进行适当肿瘤分期和治疗规划的关键第一步。