Role of positron emission tomography in staging esophageal
cancer.
Luketich JD, Schauer PR, Meltzer CC, Landreneau RJ, Urso GK, Townsend DW,
Ferson PF, Keenan RJ, Belani CP
BACKGROUND: Conventional noninvasive staging of esophageal cancer is inaccurate.
This study investigated the role of positron emission tomography (PET) in
staging esophageal cancer. METHODS: Patients with potentially resectable
esophageal cancer were included. A whole-body PET scan was acquired after
injection of 18F-fluorodeoxyglucose and was evaluated for areas of increased
focal uptake. Accuracy was determined by comparing PET with surgical staging.
RESULTS: Potentially resectable esophageal cancer was identified in 35 patients.
Positron emission tomography detected nine sites of distant metastases missed by
conventional scanning, but one false-negative PET scan occurred in a patient
with a 2-mm liver lesion. There were 11 false-negative PET scans for small,
intracapsular local-regional nodal metastases (mean diameter 5.2 mm; range 2 to
10 mm). For distant metastases, the sensitivity was 88%, the specificity was
93%, and the accuracy was 91%. For local-regional nodal metastases, the
sensitivity was 45%, the specificity was 100%, and the accuracy was 48%.
CONCLUSIONS: Positron emission tomography improved our ability to detect distant
metastases missed by conventional noninvasive staging of esophageal cancer.
Small local-regional nodal metastases are not identified by current PET
technology. Early use of PET in the staging of patients with esophageal cancer
could facilitate treatment planning and identifying unsuspected distant
metastases in up to 20% of patients with a negative metastatic survey by
conventional staging.
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