Purpose Lymph node (LN) characterization is crucial in determining the stage and treatment decisions in patient with lung cancer. Although Results Metastatic lymph nodes tended to have higher CVs than the inflammatory LNs. The mean CV of metastatic LNs (0.30±0.08; range: 0.08-0.55) was higher than that of inflammatory LNs (0.17+0.06; range, 0.07-0.32; P<0.0001). On receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curve analysis, the area under curve was 0.901, and using 0.20 as cut-off value, sensitivity, specificity, positive predictive value (PPV), negative predictive value (NPV), and accuracy were 88.5 %, 76.2 %, 82.2 %, 84.3, and 83.0 % respectively. Accuracy of CV was slightly higher than SUVmax and diameter, but significantly higher than visual assessment and HUmax. Conclusions In patients with adenocarcinoma of the lung having no prior treatments, metastatic LNs showed more heterogeneous 18 F-FDG uptake than inflammatory LNs. Measuring the CV of the SUV derived from a manual volume of interest (VOI) can be helpful in determining metastatic LN of adenocarcinoma of the lung. Including diagnostic criteria of CV into the diagnostic approach can increase the accuracy of mediastinal node status.
In many circumstances, causing sites of low back pain (LBP) cannot be determined only by anatomical imaging. Combined functional and morphological imaging such as bone scan with single-photon emission computed tomography/computed tomography (SPECT/CT) may be helpful in identifying active lesions. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the usefulness of bone SPECT/CT in localizing the pain site and the treatment of chronic LBP. One hundred seventy-five patients suffering from chronic LBP who underwent SPECT/CT were included, retrospectively. All of the patients received multiple general treatments according to the symptoms, and some of them underwent additional target-specific treatment based on SPECT/CT. Numerical rating scale (NRS) pain score was used to assess the pain intensity. Of 175 patients, 127 showed good response to the given therapies, while the rest did not. Overall, 79.4% of patients with definite active lesions showed good response. Patients with mild active or no lesions on SPECT/CT had relatively lower response rate of 63.0%. Good response was observed by the treatment with the guidance of active lesions identified on SPECT/CT. SPECT/CT could be useful in identifying active lesions in patients with chronic LBP and guiding the clinicians to use adequate treatment.Graphical Abstract
Background
Breast cancer is one of the most common cancers in women. About 30%–85% of breast cancers will metastasize to the bone during the course of the illness. Many studies have shown that molecular marker/subtypes can be useful in determining incidence of different and inconsistent bone metastases. This study aimed to determine the correlation of the risk of bone metastases in breast cancer based on the expression of molecular markers.
Methods
The research was conducted retrospectively by searching patients' medical record data. The target population of this study was all patients diagnosed with breast cancer who came to our tertiary hospital in the Nuclear Medicine and Molecular Imaging Department from January 2012 to December 2016.
Results
One hundred and thirty patients (n = 130) were enrolled during the study period with characteristics of sex, age, and immunohistochemical/molecular subtype examination that underwent bone scintigraphy. Mean of age was 50.2 (23–79) years. There were no significant correlations between ER, PR, and HER-2 expressions with bone metastases in breast cancer patients. Ki-67 was showed to be correlated with bone metastases in breast cancer patients in our bivariate analysis. Molecular subtype/markers had no statistically significant correlation with bone metastases in patients with breast cancer.
Conclusion
Ki-67 with high proliferation index was the most powerful molecular marker to determine the risk of bone metastases. The prevalence of bone metastases in the group with Ki-67 expression with high proliferation (≥20) was 1.8 times greater than the prevalence of bone metastases in the weakest HER-2 group.
Background: The F-18 fluorodeoxyglucose positron emission/computed tomography (FDG PET/CT) has become an established diagnostic imaging for malignancy. However, there are other diseases that can also be identified with FDG, some of them are infections such as tuberculosis. Case presentation: In this case report, two patients showed multiple hypermetabolic tuberculosis lesions on FDG PET/CT, with one of the patients having history of malignancy. The objective of the present case report is to emphasize the need to use other differential diagnosis techniques for tuberculosis especially in tuberculosisendemic countries when interpreting FDG PET/CT. Conclusion: By analyzing diagnostic imaging alone, there is a high chance of misinterpreting asymptomatic tuberculosis patient as having malignancy. Therefore, there is need for correlation with clinical data as well as other imaging modalities and PET/CT with more specific tracer in order to differentiate malignancy from benign disease such as tuberculosis.
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