Title of article :
Can [F-18] fluorodeoxyglucose positron emission tomography replace sentinel lymph node biopsy for the detection of axillary metastases in patients with early-stage breast cancer?
Author/Authors :
GÖRGÜLÜ, Semih Gülhane Military Medical Academy - Department of General Surgery, TURKEY , CAN, Mehmet Fatih Gülhane Military Medical Academy - Department of General Surgery, TURKEY , HANÇERLIOGULLARI, Oguz Gülhane Military Medical Academy - Department of General Surgery, TURKEY , ARSLAN, Nuri Gülhane Military Medical Academy - Department of Nuclear Medicine, TURKEY , ÖZTÜRK, Erkan Gülhane Military Medical Academy - Department of General Surgery, TURKEY , ÖZTÜRK, Emel Ufuk University - Faculty of Medicine - Department of Nuclear Medicine, TURKEY , BALKAN, Müjdat Gülhane Military Medical Academy - Department of General Surgery, TURKEY , TUFAN, Turgut Gülhane Military Medical Academy - Department of General Surgery, TURKEY
From page :
17
To page :
23
Abstract :
Aim: To investigate the value of fluorodeoxyglucose positron emission tomography (FDG-PET) in detecting axillary involvement, and to compare its accuracy with sentinel lymph node biopsy (SLNB) in patients with clinically early-stage breast cancer. Materials and methods: Twenty-eight female patients with histologically-confirmed T1-2 breast cancer who were scheduled to have SLNB were included in the study. FDG-PET images were obtained 1-7 days prior to surgery with an intravenous injection of 370 MBq of FDG, while plasma glucose levels were maintained below 120 mg/dL. All the images were interpreted by 2 independent nuclear medicine specialists, who were blinded to the histological diagnoses. SLNB was performed in standard fashion with peri-tumoral injection of isosulphan blue dye. In all cases, a level I-II axillary dissection was performed following SLNB. Sentinel nodes were processed after formalin fixation; no frozen sections were used. Results: Thirteen (46%) patients were found to have axillary involvement. SLNB (an average of 2.3 LNs removed perpatient) demonstrated metastases in all 13 patients. The diagnostic accuracy of FDG-PET was as follows: true-positivein 4 out of 13 patients (overall sensitivity = 31%), false-negative in 1 patient with metastasis (overall specificity = 94%),positive predictive value = 80%, negative predictive value = 63%, and accuracy = 68%. Conclusion: FDG-PET appears to be significantly less accurate than SLNB at detecting axillary metastases. In patients with an axillary-positive PET scan, however, axillary lymph node dissection may be performed without prior SLNB.
Keywords :
Breast cancer , sentinel lymph node biopsy , positron emission tomography , axillary metastasis
Journal title :
Turkish Journal of Medical Sciences (TJMS)
Journal title :
Turkish Journal of Medical Sciences (TJMS)
Record number :
2529315
Link To Document :
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