Objectives: This study aimed to clarify the number and cause of incidental findings detected on positron emission tomography (PET)/CT in patients undergoing investigation for presumed lung cancer. Methods: The scan reports from PET/CT studies performed for patients with lung cancer under National Institute for Clinical Evidence guidelines from January 2006 until March 2008 were retrospectively reviewed. Incidental findings were followed up by a combination of case note review, clinician feedback, colonoscopy database, histopathology and follow-up imaging. Results: 818 patients were investigated for lung cancer in the study period. 197 incidental findings were found in 175 (21%) patients. The subsequent investigation of 108 lesions confirmed a pathological correlation in 71 (66%) cases. A second primary malignancy was found in 10 patients within the bowel (6), breast (2), tongue (1) and stomach (1). A pre-malignant lesion was confirmed in 25 cases (24 large bowel tubulovillous adenomas and a follicular thyroid lesion). A further 41 (5%) benign abnormalities were detected at multiple sites; the thyroid gland was the single most frequently affected site (14 abnormalities). There were 36 (4.4%) false-positive reported findings, including 17 in the region of the pharynx and larynx and 12 within the large bowel. Conclusions: Overall, 9.2% of patients with suspected or known lung cancer having PET/CT had a confirmed incidental finding. A malignant or pre-malignant lesion was found in 1.2% and 3.0%, respectively. These were mostly located within the gastrointestinal tract. The majority of false-positive incidental findings were located in the larynx and pharynx. Uptake in these regions is unlikely to be significant in the absence of a CT morphological correlation.
ObjectiveTo compare the diagnostic accuracy of conventional 3T MRI against 1.5T MR arthrography (MRA) in patients with clinical femoroacetabular impingement (FAI).MethodsSixty-eight consecutive patients with clinical FAI underwent both 1.5T MRA and 3T MRI. Imaging was prospectively analysed by two musculoskeletal radiologists, blinded to patient outcomes and scored for internal derangement including labral and cartilage abnormality. Interobserver variation was assessed by kappa analysis. Thirty-nine patients subsequently underwent hip arthroscopy and surgical results and radiology findings were analysed.ResultsBoth readers had higher sensitivities for detecting labral tears with 3T MRI compared to 1.5T MRA (not statistically significant p=0.07). For acetabular cartilage defect both readers had higher statistically significant sensitivities using 3T MRI compared to 1.5T MRA (p=0.02). Both readers had a slightly higher sensitivity for detecting delamination with 1.5T MRA compared to 3T MRI, but these differences were not statistically significant (p=0.66). Interobserver agreement was substantial to perfect agreement for all parameters except the identification of delamination (3T MRI showed moderate agreement and 1.5T MRA substantial agreement).ConclusionConventional 3T MRI may be at least equivalent to 1.5T MRA in detecting acetabular labrum and possibly superior to 1.5T MRA in detecting cartilage defects in patients with suspected FAI.Key Points• Conventional 3T MRI is equivalent to 1.5T MRA for diagnosing labral tears.
• Conventional 3T MRI is superior to 1.5T MRA for diagnosing acetabular cartilage defect.
• Conventional 3T MRI is equivalent to 1.5T MRA for diagnosing cartilage delamination.
• Symptom severity score was significantly higher (p<0.05) in group proceeding to surgery.
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