Published in:
01-08-2015 | Original Article
Should PET/CT be implemented in the routine imaging work-up of locally advanced head and neck squamous cell carcinoma? A prospective analysis
Authors:
Jon Cacicedo, Iratxe Fernandez, Olga del Hoyo, Ainara Dolado, Javier Gómez-Suarez, Eduardo Hortelano, Aintzane Sancho, Jose I. Pijoan, Julio Alvarez, Jose M. Espinosa, Ayman Gaafar, Pedro Bilbao
Published in:
European Journal of Nuclear Medicine and Molecular Imaging
|
Issue 9/2015
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Abstract
Purpose
The objective of this study was to determine the incremental staging information provided by positron emission tomography/computed tomography (PET/CT) and its impact on management plans in patients with untreated stage III–IV head and neck squamous cell carcinoma (HNSCC).
Methods
We prospectively studied, between September 2011 and February 2013, 84 consecutive patients [median age 63.5 years (39–84); 73 men] with histologically confirmed HNSCC. First, based on a conventional work-up (physical examination, CT imaging of the head, neck and chest), the multidisciplinary Head and Neck Tumour Board documented the TNM stage and a management plan for each patient, outlining the modalities to be used, including surgery, radiation therapy (RT), chemotherapy or a combination. After release of the PET/CT results, new TNM staging and management plans were agreed on by the multidisciplinary Tumour Board. Any changes in stage or intended management due to the PET/CT findings were then analysed. The impact on patient management was classified as: low (treatment modality, delivery and intent unchanged), moderate (change within the same treatment modality: type of surgery, radiation technique/dose) or high (change in treatment intent and/or treatment modality → curative to palliative, or surgery to chemoradiation or detection of unknown primary tumour or a synchronous second primary tumour). TNM stage was validated by histopathological analysis, additional imaging or follow-up. Accuracy of the conventional and PET/CT-based staging was compared using McNemar’s test.
Results
Conventional and PET/CT stages were discordant in 32/84 (38 %) cases: the T stage in 2/32 (6.2 %), the N stage in 21/32 (65.7 %) and the M stage 9/32 (28.1 %). Patient management was altered in 22/84 (26 %) patients, with a moderate impact in 8 (9.5 %) patients and high impact in 14 (16.6 %) patients. PET/CT TNM classification was significantly more accurate (92.5 vs 73.7 %) than conventional staging with a p value < 0.001 (McNemar’s test).
Conclusion
PET/CT should be implemented in the routine imaging work-up of stage III–IV HNSCC.