Miles Kenneth, McQueen Liam, Ngai Stanley, Law Phillip
Department of Diagnostic Imaging, Princess Alexandra Hospital, Woolloongabba, Brisbane, Australia.
Institute of Nuclear Medicine, University College London, London, UK.
Cancer Imaging. 2015 Nov 17;15:18. doi: 10.1186/s40644-015-0053-1.
Positron Emission Tomography/Magnetic Resonance Imaging (PET/MRI) is a hybrid of two technologies each with its own evidence for clinical effectiveness. This article amalgamates evidence for clinical effectiveness of fluorodeoxyglucose (FDG) PET/CT and MRI as separate modalities with current evidence for hybrid PET/MRI and considers whether such an approach might provide a stronger case for the clinical use of PET/MRI at an earlier stage.Because links between diagnostic accuracy and health outcomes have already been established for FDG-PET/CT in the investigation of suspected residual or recurrent malignancies, evidence showing improved diagnostic performance and therapeutic impact from the use of PET/MRI as an alternative would imply clinical effectiveness of this modality for this application. A meta-analysis of studies comparing FDG-PET/CT to MRI in patients with suspected residual disease or recurrence of tumours indicates complementary roles for these modalities. PET demonstrates greater sensitivity for recurrence within lymph nodes whereas MRI is more effective that PET/CT in the detection of skeletal and hepatic recurrence. A review of studies assessing therapeutic impact of PET/MRI suggests a greater likelihood for change in clinical management when PET/MRI is used for assessment of suspected residual or recurrent disease rather than tumour staging.Supplementing the evidence-base for FDG-PET/MRI with studies that compare the components of this hybrid technology deployed separately indicates that FDG-PET/MRI is likely to be clinical effective for the investigation of patients with a range of suspected residual or recurrent cancers. This indication should therefore be prioritised for further health technology assessment.
正电子发射断层扫描/磁共振成像(PET/MRI)是两种技术的结合体,每种技术都有其临床有效性的证据。本文将氟脱氧葡萄糖(FDG)PET/CT和MRI作为单独模式的临床有效性证据与当前混合PET/MRI的证据进行了整合,并考虑这种方法是否能在更早阶段为PET/MRI的临床应用提供更有力的依据。由于在疑似残留或复发性恶性肿瘤的调查中,FDG-PET/CT的诊断准确性与健康结果之间的联系已经确立,因此,显示使用PET/MRI作为替代方法能提高诊断性能和治疗效果的证据将意味着这种模式在此应用中的临床有效性。一项对疑似残留疾病或肿瘤复发患者中比较FDG-PET/CT与MRI的研究的荟萃分析表明,这些模式具有互补作用。PET对淋巴结内的复发显示出更高的敏感性,而MRI在检测骨骼和肝脏复发方面比PET/CT更有效。一项评估PET/MRI治疗效果的研究综述表明,当PET/MRI用于评估疑似残留或复发性疾病而非肿瘤分期时,临床管理发生改变的可能性更大。用比较分别部署的这种混合技术组件的研究来补充FDG-PET/MRI的证据基础表明,FDG-PET/MRI对于一系列疑似残留或复发性癌症患者的调查可能具有临床有效性。因此,这一适应症应优先进行进一步的卫生技术评估。