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Journal of Nuclear Medicine

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Meeting ReportOncology, Clinical Science Track

Role of 18F FDG PET-CT in restaging of patients with gall bladder carcinoma: - experience at a tertiary care hospital

Shelvin Vadi, Tarun jain, Rajender Kumar, Ashwani Sood, Anish Bhattacharya and Bhagwant Mittal
Journal of Nuclear Medicine May 2016, 57 (supplement 2) 1597;
Shelvin Vadi
4Nuclear Medicine & PET Postgraduate Institute of Medical Education & Research Chandigarh India
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Tarun jain
4Nuclear Medicine & PET Postgraduate Institute of Medical Education & Research Chandigarh India
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Rajender Kumar
2Nuclear Medicine PGIMER Chandigarh India
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Ashwani Sood
3Nuclear Medicine Post Graduate Institute of Medical Education and R Chandigarh India
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Anish Bhattacharya
1Department of Nuclear Medicine Chandigarh India
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Bhagwant Mittal
4Nuclear Medicine & PET Postgraduate Institute of Medical Education & Research Chandigarh India
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Abstract

1597

Objectives To evaluate the diagnostic performance of contrast enhanced F-18 FDG PET/CT in restaging of gall bladder carcinoma

Methods A retrospective analysis of histopathological proven patients with gall bladder adenocarcinoma (age range 28 -80years; mean age 51.1 years; Male/ female 21/73) was done. All the patients had been treated previously (surgery, radiotherapy or chemotherapy) and referred for F-18 FDG PET/CT to rule out residual or recurrent disease. On FDG PET any abnormal tracer uptake with corresponding CECT lesion were taken as positive. Histopathological examination and clinical or imaging follow up were taken as gold standard.

Results Out of the 94 patients, 77 patients were true positive for primary disease. FDG PET/CT detected abnormal FDG uptake in 82 patients. Uptake at the primary site was detected in 32 (34%) patients and only metastatic lesions in 50(53%) patients. Out of 32 patients with primary lesions, 22 had adjacent liver involvement, 5 had adjacent bowel involvement, 2 had only regional lymph nodes, 9 only had distant lesions, 16 had both regional and distant lesions and remaining had only primary lesion. On lesion based analyses in 77 patients with distant metastases, lymph nodes, abdominal wall & peritoneal deposits, liver, lung, skeleton, adrenal and muscle metastases were noted in 26, 29, 27, 13, 7, 6 and 1 patients respectively. Additionally we also detected metachronous primaries in 8 patients and confirmed on histopathology (lung-3, pancreas, renal, thyroid, breast, lymphoma -one each). We found FDG PET/CT sensitivity, specificity, PPV, NPV and accuracy to be 95% [95% CI: 87-99], 47% [95% CI: 23-72], 89% [95% CI: 80-95], 67% [95% CI: 35-90] and 94% respectively for residual/recurrence detection (P <0.05). There was no correlation between SUVmax and patient survival (Spearman's coefficient rank correlation).

Conclusions We concluded that 18F-FDG PET/CT had high diagnostic accuracy for suspected residual/recurrent disease in gall bladder cancer patients and also useful in detection of additional metachronous second primary.

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Journal of Nuclear Medicine
Vol. 57, Issue supplement 2
May 1, 2016
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Role of 18F FDG PET-CT in restaging of patients with gall bladder carcinoma: - experience at a tertiary care hospital
Shelvin Vadi, Tarun jain, Rajender Kumar, Ashwani Sood, Anish Bhattacharya, Bhagwant Mittal
Journal of Nuclear Medicine May 2016, 57 (supplement 2) 1597;

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Role of 18F FDG PET-CT in restaging of patients with gall bladder carcinoma: - experience at a tertiary care hospital
Shelvin Vadi, Tarun jain, Rajender Kumar, Ashwani Sood, Anish Bhattacharya, Bhagwant Mittal
Journal of Nuclear Medicine May 2016, 57 (supplement 2) 1597;
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