Screening for bone metastases: whole-body MRI using a 32-channel system versus dual-modality PET-CT

被引:0
|
作者
Gerwin P. Schmidt
Stefan O. Schoenberg
Rupert Schmid
Robert Stahl
Reinhold Tiling
Christoph R. Becker
Maximilian F. Reiser
Andrea Baur-Melnyk
机构
[1] University Hospitals Grosshadern,Department of Clinical Radiology
[2] Ludwig-Maximilians-University Munich,Department of Nuclear Medicine
[3] University Hospitals Grosshadern,undefined
[4] Ludwig-Maximilians-University Munich,undefined
来源
European Radiology | 2007年 / 17卷
关键词
Bone; Metastases; Magnetic resonance; Computed tomography; Positron emission tomography;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
The diagnostic accuracy of screening for bone metastases was evaluated using whole-body magnetic resonance imaging (WB-MRI) compared with combined fluorodeoxyglucose (FDG) positron emission tomography (PET) and computed tomography (CT) (FDG-PET-CT). In a prospective, blinded study, 30 consecutive patients (18 female, 12 male; 24–76 years) with different oncological diseases and suspected skeletal metastases underwent FDG-PET-CT as well as WB-MRI with the use of parallel imaging (PAT). With a 32-channel scanner, coronal imaging of the entire body and sagittal imaging of the complete spine was performed using T1-weighted and short tau inversion recovery (STIR) sequences in combination. PET-CT was conducted using a low-dose CT for attenuation correction, a PET-emission scan and diagnostic contrast-enhanced CT scan covering the thorax, abdomen and pelvis. Two radiologists read the MRI scans, another radiologist in combination with a nuclear medicine physician read the PET-CT scans, each in consensus. The standard of reference was constituted by radiological follow-up within at least 6 months. In 28 patients, 102 malignant and 25 benign bone lesions were detected and confirmed. WB-MRI showed a sensitivity of 94% (96/102), PET-CT exams achieved 78% (79/102; P<0.001). Specificities were 76% (19/25) for WB-MRI and 80% (20/25) for PET-CT (P>0.05). Diagnostic accuracy was 91% (115/127) and 78% (99/127; P<0.001), respectively. Cut-off size for the detection of malignant bone lesions was 2 mm for WB-MRI and 5 mm for PET-CT. WB-MRI revealed ten additional bone metastases due to the larger field of view. In conclusion, WB-MRI and FDG-PET-CT are robust imaging modalities for a systemic screening for metastatic bone disease. PAT allows WB-MRI bone marrow screening at high spatial resolution and with a diagnostic accuracy superior to PET-CT.
引用
收藏
页码:939 / 949
页数:10
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] Automatic Nasopharyngeal Carcinoma Segmentation Using Fully Convolutional Networks with Auxiliary Paths on Dual-Modality PET-CT Images
    Zhao, Lijun
    Lu, Zixiao
    Jiang, Jun
    Zhou, Yujia
    Wu, Yi
    Feng, Qianjin
    JOURNAL OF DIGITAL IMAGING, 2019, 32 (03) : 462 - 470
  • [32] Comparison between whole-body diffusion MRI and 18FDG PET-CT in the diagnosis of symptomatic Myeloma
    Brillet, E.
    Decaux, O.
    Bernard, A. -M.
    Devillers, A. -M.
    de la Chapelle, T. Lamy
    Guillin, R.
    Garin, E.
    Duvauferrier, R.
    EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF NUCLEAR MEDICINE AND MOLECULAR IMAGING, 2011, 38 : S378 - S378
  • [33] Rectal cancer staging for distant metastases: Ultra small paramagnetic iron oxide (USPIO) enhanced whole body MRI versus PET-CT
    Van Dam, RM
    Bloemen, JG
    Lahaye, M
    Lammering, G
    Arens, A
    Teule, GJJ
    Beets, GL
    Dejong, CHC
    Beets-Tan, RGH
    ANNALS OF ONCOLOGY, 2006, 17
  • [34] Comparison of diagnostic capability about different types of bone metastases between PET/CT and whole-body bone scan
    Wang, Rongfu
    Zhu, Anhui
    JOURNAL OF NUCLEAR MEDICINE, 2018, 59
  • [35] Prospective Evaluation of Whole-Body MRI versus FDG PET/CT for Lesion Detection in Participants with Myeloma
    Messiou, Christina
    Porta, Nuria
    Sharma, Bhupinder
    Levine, Daniel
    Koh, Dow-Mu
    Boyd, Kevin
    Pawlyn, Charlotte
    Riddell, Angela
    Downey, Katherine
    Croft, James
    Morgan, Veronica
    Stern, Simon
    Cheung, Betty
    Kyriakou, Charalampia
    Kaczmarek, Pawel
    Winfield, Jessica
    Blackledge, Matthew
    Oyen, Wim J. G.
    Kaiser, Martin F.
    RADIOLOGY-IMAGING CANCER, 2021, 3 (05):
  • [36] LM-UNet: Whole-Body PET-CT Lesion Segmentation with Dual-Modality-Based Annotations Driven by Latent Mamba U-Net
    Liu, Anglin
    Jia, Dengqiang
    Sun, Kaicong
    Meng, Runqi
    Zhao, Meixin
    Jiang, Yongluo
    Dong, Zhijian
    Gao, Yaozong
    Shen, Dinggang
    MEDICAL IMAGE COMPUTING AND COMPUTER ASSISTED INTERVENTION - MICCAI 2024, PT IX, 2024, 15009 : 405 - 414
  • [37] Whole-Body MRI vs. PET/CT for the Detection of Bone Metastases in Patients With Prostate Cancer: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis
    Zhan, Yuefu
    Zhang, Guangming
    Li, Mingliang
    Zhou, Xiaobo
    FRONTIERS IN ONCOLOGY, 2021, 11
  • [38] Comparison of whole-body MRI with automatic moving table technique and bone scintigraphy for screening for bone metastases in patients with breast cancer
    Engelhard, K
    Hollenbach, HP
    Wohlfart, K
    von Imhoff, E
    Fellner, FA
    EUROPEAN RADIOLOGY, 2004, 14 (01) : 99 - 105
  • [39] Comparison of whole-body MRI with automatic moving table technique and bone scintigraphy for screening for bone metastases in patients with breast cancer
    K. Engelhard
    H. P. Hollenbach
    K. Wohlfart
    E. von Imhoff
    F. A. Fellner
    European Radiology, 2004, 14 : 99 - 105
  • [40] Hybrid imaging for detection of carcinoma of unknown primary: A preliminary comparison trial of whole-body PET/MRI versus PET/CT
    Ruhlmann, Verena
    Ruhlmann, Marcus
    Bellendorf, Alexander
    Grueneisen, Johannes
    Sawicki, Lino M.
    Grafe, Hong
    Forsting, Michael
    Bockisch, Andreas
    Umutlu, Lale
    EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF RADIOLOGY, 2016, 85 (11) : 1941 - 1947