Truong Mylene T, Ko Jane P, Rossi Santiago E, Rossi Ignacio, Viswanathan Chitra, Bruzzi John F, Marom Edith M, Erasmus Jeremy J
From the Department of Radiology, University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center, 1515 Holcombe Blvd, Unit 1478, Houston, TX 77030 (M.T.T., C.V., E.M.M., J.J.E.); Department of Radiology, New York University Langone Medical Center, New York, NY (J.P.K.); Department of Radiology, Centro de Diagnóstico Dr Enrique Rossi, Buenos Aires, Argentina (S.E.R., I.R.); and Department of Radiology, University College Hospital Galway, Galway, Ireland (J.F.B.).
Radiographics. 2014 Oct;34(6):1658-79. doi: 10.1148/rg.346130092.
A solitary pulmonary nodule (SPN) is defined as a round opacity that is smaller than 3 cm. It may be solid or subsolid in attenuation. Semisolid nodules may have purely ground-glass attenuation or be partly solid (mixed solid and ground-glass attenuation). The widespread use of multidetector computed tomography (CT) has increased the detection of SPNs. Although clinical assessment of patients' risk factors for malignancy--such as age, smoking history, and history of malignancy--is important to determine appropriate treatment, in the recently published Fleischner guidelines for subsolid nodules, smoking history does not factor into their recommendations for management because there is an increasing incidence of lung adenocarcinoma in younger and nonsmoking patients. At imaging evaluation, obtaining prior chest radiographs or CT images is useful to assess nodule growth. Further imaging evaluation, including CT enhancement studies and positron emission tomography (PET), helps determine the malignant potential of solid SPNs. For subsolid nodules, initial follow-up CT is performed at 3 months to determine persistence, because lesions with an infectious or inflammatory cause can resolve in the interval. CT enhancement studies are not applicable for subsolid nodules, and PET is of limited utility because of the low metabolic activity of these lesions. Because of the likelihood that persistent subsolid nodules represent adenocarcinoma with indolent growth, serial imaging reassessment for a minimum of 3 years and/or obtaining tissue samples for histologic analysis are recommended. In the follow-up of subsolid SPNs, imaging features that indicate an increased risk for malignancy include an increase in size, an increase in attenuation, and development of a solid component.
孤立性肺结节(SPN)定义为直径小于3 cm的圆形不透光区。其密度可能为实性或亚实性。亚实性结节可能表现为纯磨玻璃密度或部分实性(实性与磨玻璃密度混合)。多排螺旋计算机断层扫描(CT)的广泛应用增加了SPN的检出率。尽管对患者的恶性肿瘤风险因素进行临床评估——如年龄、吸烟史和恶性肿瘤病史——对于确定合适的治疗方法很重要,但在最近发布的关于亚实性结节的Fleischner指南中,吸烟史并未纳入其管理建议,因为年轻和不吸烟患者中肺腺癌的发病率在增加。在影像学评估中,获取既往胸部X线片或CT图像有助于评估结节的生长情况。进一步的影像学评估,包括CT增强扫描和正电子发射断层扫描(PET),有助于确定实性SPN的恶性潜能。对于亚实性结节,最初在3个月时进行随访CT检查以确定结节是否持续存在,因为具有感染或炎症病因的病变在这段时间内可能会消散。CT增强扫描不适用于亚实性结节,而PET的作用有限,因为这些病变的代谢活性较低。由于持续存在的亚实性结节很可能代表生长缓慢的腺癌,因此建议至少连续3年进行影像学重新评估和/或获取组织样本进行组织学分析。在亚实性SPN的随访中,提示恶性风险增加的影像学特征包括大小增加、密度增加和实性成分的出现。