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Journal of Nuclear Medicine Vol. 45 No. 8 1279-1286
© 2004 by Society of Nuclear Medicine


Clinical Investigations

Retrospective Digital Image Fusion of Multidetector CT and 18F-FDG PET: Clinical Value in Pancreatic Lesions—A Prospective Study with 104 Patients

Arne-Jörn Lemke, MD1, Stefan Markus Niehues, MD1, Norbert Hosten, MD2, Holger Amthauer, MD1, Michael Boehmig, MD3, Christian Stroszczynski, MD1, Torsten Rohlfing, PhD4, Stefan Rosewicz, MD3 and Roland Felix, MD1

1 Charité, Universitätsmedizin Berlin, Campus Virchow-Klinikum, Klinik für Strahlenheilkunde, Berlin, Germany
2 Ernst-Moritz-Arndt-Universität Greifswald, Institut für Diagnostische Radiologie, Greifswald, Germany
3 Charité, Universitätsmedizin Berlin, Campus Virchow-Klinikum, Klinik für Gastroenterologie, Berlin, Germany
4 Department of Neurosurgery, Image Guidance Laboratories, Stanford University, Stanford, California

Differential diagnosis of pancreatic lesions still remains a problem. Whereas CT provides high spatial resolution, PET detects malignant lesions with high sensitivity. The objective of this study was to evaluate the clinical benefit of PET/CT image fusion in the diagnostic workup of pancreatic cancer. Methods: One hundred four patients with suspected pancreatic lesion underwent triple-phase multidetector CT and 18F-FDG PET scanning. Voxel-based retrospective registration and fusion of CT and PET were performed with recently developed software. CT, PET, and fused images were assessed by 2 radiologists with regard to the detection of malignancies, possible infiltration of adjacent tissue or lymph nodes, or distant metastases. Results: Fusion of CT and PET images was technically successful in 96.2%. In 2 cases, paraaortic lymph node infiltration was detected only by image fusion; in a further 8 cases, lymph node metastases were confirmed with improved localization. In 5 patients, additional pancreatic tumors or distant metastases only suspected during PET scanning were confirmed. Image fusion improved the sensitivity of malignancy detection from 76.6% (CT) and 84.4% (PET) to 89.1% (image fusion). Compared with CT alone, image fusion increased the sensitivity of detecting tissue infiltration to 68.2%, but at the cost of decreased specificity. Conclusion: The most important supplementary finding supplied by image fusion is a more precise correlation with focal tracer hot spots in PET. Image fusion improved the sensitivity of differentiating between benign and malignant pancreatic lesions with no significant change in specificity. All image modalities failed to stage lymph node involvement.

Key Words: PET • CT, spiral • image manipulation or reconstruction • pancreas • computer applications, detection


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