Effect of PET/CT on management of patients with non - Small cell lung cancer: Results of a prospective study with 5-year survival data

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Abstract

We investigated the incremental management impact and prognostic value of staging with 18F-FDG PET/CT in patients with non - small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) being considered for potentially curative therapies. Methods: Information on 168 consecutive patients with NSCLC being considered for surgery or definitive radiotherapy with curative intent before PET/CT was entered into a prospective database. The pre-PET/CT management plan, based on conventional imaging (conventional CT, appropriately supplemented by bone scintigraphy or other modalities), was defined prospectively by referring clinicians before PET/CT results became available. After PET/CT, actual clinical management was recorded, and patients were followed up until 5 y or death. The appropriateness of PET/CT management plans was assessed by biopsy when available, clinical follow-up, and survival analysis. Results: Stage was discordant on PET/CT and conventional imaging in 50.6% of patients (41.1% upstaged, 9.5% downstaged), with high management impact (change in treatment modality or curative intent) in 42.3% of patients. Both conventional imaging stage and PET/CT stage were strongly predictive of overall survival (OS) but there were greater differences between hazard rates and separations in the OS curves for stage groupings determined using PET/CT. OS was also strongly predicted by PET/CT-directed choice of therapy (P < 0.0001). Conclusion: PET/CT frequently affects patient management and strongly predicts OS in NSCLC, supporting the appropriateness of such changes. COPYRIGHT © 2012 by the Society of Nuclear Medicine, Inc.

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Gregory, D. L., Hicks, R. J., Hogg, A., Binns, D. S., Shum, P. L., Milner, A., … Mac Manus, M. P. (2012). Effect of PET/CT on management of patients with non - Small cell lung cancer: Results of a prospective study with 5-year survival data. Journal of Nuclear Medicine, 53(7), 1007–1015. https://doi.org/10.2967/jnumed.111.099713

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