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Breast Cancer and PET/CT
PET BETTER AT FINDING RECURRENT BREAST CANCER AND PREDICTING
PATIENT SURVIVAL
PET imaging can reassure previously
treated women they are breast cancer free, and can better predict if their
disease is likely to recur than other types of diagnostic imaging,
according to researchers. The study, published in the March issue of
The Journal of Nuclear Medicine, compared the outcomes of 61 women
previously treated for breast cancer. The women received both 18F-FDG PET
and conventional imaging (CI), and were followed-up for at least 6 months
to determine how, or if, their disease progressed.
Significantly, all six women with
positive CI results, indicating their disease had returned, but whose PET
scans were negative, were free of disease at last follow-up. In the nine
women with negative CI but positive PET results, six were later found to
have recurrent disease and received additional treatment. Overall, PET and
CI findings differed in a quarter of the women; PET correctly predicted
the outcome in 80% of these cases vs. 20% for CI.
PET was also better at determining the
length of disease-free survival, with 90% accuracy vs. 75% for CI. Women
with positive results for both PET and CI showed similar periods of
survival; however, women with negative PET results had significantly
longer disease-free survival than those with negative CI results. Overall,
PET demonstrated better sensitivity (93% v. 79%) and specificity (84% v.
68%) than CI. CI includes imaging techniques such as x-ray, CT, sonography,
MRI, mammography, and bone scans.
The authors point out that early detection of local recurrence and metastatic
disease can impact therapy. For example, local recurrence and axillary lymph
node involvement may be treated surgically or with radiation, whereas mediastinal
lymph node involvement or distant metastases typically require chemotherapy.
The six women with true-positive PET results and false-negative CI were able
to receive treatment for their recurrence, such as additional chemotherapy,
radiation, and surgery. However, at the end of follow-up, all six women had
evidence of disease. The authors concluded that although earlier detection did
not result in remission in these cases, it might have delayed the progression
of disease.
According to the American Cancer
Society approximately 203,500 women will be diagnosed with breast cancer
this year. The Center for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) decided on
February 27 to reimburse for FDG PET scans for staging patients with
distant metastasis or for restaging patients with locoregional recurrence
or metastasis, and to determine how patients are responding to treatment.
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