2012
DOI: 10.3324/haematol.2012.063909
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Positron emission tomography/computed tomography surveillance in patients with lymphoma: a fox hunt?

Abstract: Despite improvements in survival rates, relapses after first-line therapy can occur in 20-50% of patients with advanced-stage Hodgkin's lymphoma (HL) or diffuse large-B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL).1,2 In both diseases, treatment failures are usually observed within 3 years of completion of treatment with the majority of relapses occurring in the first 12 months for HL 3,4 and 18 months for DLBCL. 4 However, no consensus exists on an optimal surveillance strategy to determine a preclinical relapse after first remissi… Show more

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Cited by 14 publications
(8 citation statements)
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“…In particular, in both HL and DLBCL, FDG-PET/CT evaluation after two chemotherapy cycles has been proposed as a surrogate test for chemosensitivity, proving to be a powerful independent prognostic indicator for treatment outcome [5,15,21]. Accordingly, PET2 proved to be the only variable of our series able to predict the presence of relapse on PETsv, thus increasing its PPV throughout the follow-up, even 36 month after first remission.…”
Section: Relevance Of Interim Pet/ct Results and Clinical Risk Profilesmentioning
confidence: 85%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…In particular, in both HL and DLBCL, FDG-PET/CT evaluation after two chemotherapy cycles has been proposed as a surrogate test for chemosensitivity, proving to be a powerful independent prognostic indicator for treatment outcome [5,15,21]. Accordingly, PET2 proved to be the only variable of our series able to predict the presence of relapse on PETsv, thus increasing its PPV throughout the follow-up, even 36 month after first remission.…”
Section: Relevance Of Interim Pet/ct Results and Clinical Risk Profilesmentioning
confidence: 85%
“…In fact, several lines of evidence fall against the use of surveillance FDG-PET/CT for relapse detection in lymphoma patients. In particular, although FDG-PET/CT offers the advantage of detecting metabolic changes, which usually occur earlier than morphological alteration, most disease relapses are actually heralded by clinical signs or by relapse of B-symptoms [5,6]. Moreover, FDG-PET/CT follow up exams are burdened by a significant rate of false positive results [6][7][8][9][10].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 97%
“…Gallamini and Kostakoglu provided reasonable recommendations of factors to consider in assessing the benefit of surveillance imaging, including: absence of clinical symptoms at diagnosis, pretreatment risk for recurrence, early response profile, cost-benefit ratio, potential survival benefit, possible site of relapse, and persistence of a residual mass at the end of treatment. 55 We agree with this approach, but recognize that these variables are not always known for each patient. Nevertheless, patients presenting with high-risk disease who are slow to respond to induction therapy and have concerning residual lesions at the conclusion of therapy likely merit closer follow-up than patients with lower-risk disease who achieve a metabolic remission after 2 cycles of induction therapy and remain in remission after a full course of therapy.…”
Section: Conclusion and Recommendationsmentioning
confidence: 77%
“…Therefore, the incidence and frequency of recurrences could conceivable be higher than reported in the present study. Nevertheless, evidence suggests that in patients with aggressive lymphoma (including highrisk DLBCL, MCL and Hodgkin lymphoma) a relapse is detected by the patient or the physician prior to routine surveillance imaging in approximately 80% of cases (Liedtke et al 2006;Cheson et al 2007;Bestawros et al 2013;Gallamini & Kostakoglu 2012). Patient-reported symptoms include lymphoadenopathy, pain and B-symptoms (Liedtke et al 2006).…”
Section: Clinical Datamentioning
confidence: 99%