How We Read Oncologic FDG PET/CT.
Michael S HofmanRodney J HicksPublished in: Cancer imaging : the official publication of the International Cancer Imaging Society (2016)
18F-fluorodeoxyglucose (FDG) PET/CT is a pivotal imaging modality for cancer imaging, assisting diagnosis, staging of patients with newly diagnosed malignancy, restaging following therapy and surveillance. Interpretation requires integration of the metabolic and anatomic findings provided by the PET and CT components which transcend the knowledge base isolated in the worlds of nuclear medicine and radiology, respectively. In the manuscript we detail our approach to reviewing and reporting a PET/CT study using the most commonly used radiotracer, FDG. This encompasses how we display, threshold intensity of images and sequence our review, which are essential for accurate interpretation. For interpretation, it is important to be aware of benign variants that demonstrate high glycolytic activity, and pathologic lesions which may not be FDG-avid, and understand the physiologic and biochemical basis of these findings. Whilst FDG PET/CT performs well in the conventional imaging paradigm of identifying, counting and measuring tumour extent, a key paradigm change is its ability to non-invasively measure glycolytic metabolism. Integrating this "metabolic signature" into interpretation enables improved accuracy and characterisation of disease providing important prognostic information that may confer a high management impact and enable better personalised patient care.
Keyphrases
- pet ct
- positron emission tomography
- high resolution
- computed tomography
- newly diagnosed
- pet imaging
- healthcare
- squamous cell carcinoma
- public health
- magnetic resonance imaging
- artificial intelligence
- high intensity
- convolutional neural network
- social media
- health information
- fluorescence imaging
- neoadjuvant chemotherapy
- mesenchymal stem cells
- replacement therapy
- image quality
- papillary thyroid
- squamous cell