Lonneux, Max
[UCL]
Reffad, Abdelmalek
[UCL]
Purpose: To analyze the efficacy and impact on management of PET-FDG in patients with metastases from unknown primary tumor. Procedures: Retrospective analysis of 24 patients referred to the PET center for metastasis of unknown primary after a negative imaging workup. PET results were validated by means of oriented imaging, follow-up or biopsy when ethically justified. Results: PET identified the primary tumor in 13/24 (54%) of patients: breast (n = 1), lung (n = 9), colon (n = 1), stomach (n = 1) and mouth (n = 1). The false positive rate of PET was 21% (5/24). PET was shown to affect the management of 10/24 patients (42%). Conclusion: Whole body PET-FDG was more effective than conventional imaging methods in detecting unknown primary tumors. PET altered patient management in 42% of cases. PET should be performed prior to other investigations in such patients and could avoid unnecessary and often unfruitful diagnostic procedures. Copyright © 2000 Elsevier Science Inc. All rights reserved.
Bibliographic reference |
Lonneux, Max ; Reffad, Abdelmalek. Metastases from unknown primary tumor: PET-FDG as initial diagnostic procedure?. In: Clinical Positron Imaging, Vol. 3, no. 4, p. 137-141 (2000) |
Permanent URL |
http://hdl.handle.net/2078.1/164437 |