Int J Gynecol Cancer. 2018 Feb;28(2):379-384. doi: 10.1097/IGC.0000000000001174.
FIGO (International Federation of Gynaecology and Obstetrics) staging is currently the most widely used clinical staging system for cervical cancer; however, this staging system has many shortcomings. One of these shortcomings is that lymph nodal status, specifically the para-aortic lymph nodal status, does not get taken into account. It is known that metabolic changes occur before changes are seen on anatomical imaging, and it is therefore possible to detect metastases earlier with the help of fluorodeoxyglucose (FDG) positron emission tomography/computed tomography (PET/CT). We hypothesized that by including an FDG PET/CT study as part of the staging investigations in patients with invasive cervical cancer, pretreatment staging would improve and management would change in a significant proportion of patients.
METHODS/MATERIALS: Patients diagnosed with FIGO stage IIIB cervical cancer from September 2010 to December 2015 received an FDG PET/CT study as part of their staging workup. A whole-body FDG PET/CT was performed before initiation of treatment, and the results were interpreted by experienced nuclear medicine physicians and radiologists. We determined the percentage of patients in whom PET/CT changed the stage and/or altered management of the patient.
There were 95 patients diagnosed with stage IIIB cervix cancer during the study period who received an FDG PET/CT as part of their staging workup. Eighty-eight patients were included in the final sample. Positron emission tomography/CT affected the management of 40% of patients, with 19% requiring a change in the radiation field due to identification of para-aortic nodal involvement and 21% upstaged to stage IVB.
Fluorodeoxyglucose PET/CT is useful in assessing distant disease and evaluating nodal involvement in patients with invasive cervical cancer. Additional findings on the PET/CT that were missed by conventional imaging and clinical examination caused treatment change in a significant proportion of patients.
国际妇产科联合会(FIGO)分期目前是宫颈癌最广泛使用的临床分期系统;然而,该分期系统存在许多缺点。其中之一是不考虑淋巴结状态,特别是主动脉旁淋巴结状态。已知代谢变化先于解剖影像学上的变化发生,因此借助氟代脱氧葡萄糖(FDG)正电子发射断层扫描/计算机断层扫描(PET/CT)可以更早地检测到转移。我们假设,通过将 FDG PET/CT 研究纳入浸润性宫颈癌患者的分期研究中,可以改善术前分期,并使很大一部分患者的治疗方式发生改变。
方法/材料:2010 年 9 月至 2015 年 12 月期间,被诊断为 FIGO 期 IIIB 宫颈癌的患者在接受治疗前,将接受 FDG PET/CT 研究作为分期检查的一部分。在开始治疗前进行全身 FDG PET/CT 检查,由有经验的核医学医师和放射科医师对结果进行解读。我们确定了 PET/CT 改变分期和/或改变患者治疗方式的患者比例。
在研究期间,有 95 例患者被诊断为 IIIB 期宫颈癌,并在分期检查中接受了 FDG PET/CT。最终有 88 例患者纳入最终样本。PET/CT 影响了 40%的患者的治疗管理,由于识别出主动脉旁淋巴结受累,19%的患者需要改变放疗野,21%的患者分期升级为 IVB 期。
FDG PET/CT 有助于评估远处疾病并评估浸润性宫颈癌患者的淋巴结受累情况。常规影像学和临床检查遗漏的 PET/CT 附加发现导致很大一部分患者的治疗方式发生改变。