Correlation between [18f]fluorodeoxyglucose positron-emission tomography scan and histology of pelvic nodes in early-stage cervical cancer.

Journal: Anticancer Research
Published:
Abstract

Background: The histological results of pelvic lymphadenectomy were studied in patients treated for early-stage cervical cancer (<4 cm) who had no nodal uptake on [(18)F]fluorodeoxyglucose positron-emission tomography combined with integrated computed tomography (FDG-PET/CT).

Methods: Patients treated between 2005 and 2008 for stage IB1 cervical cancer cancer <4 cm who underwent a FDG-PET/CT followed by surgical evaluation of pelvic nodes were reviewed.

Results: A total of 16 patients were studied. The median age of patients was 43 (range 29-62) years. Surgery was performed laparoscopically and by laparotomic approach in 13 and 3 cases, respectively. Two patients had histologically proven pelvic involvement. The false-negative rate and negative predictive value of PET-CT imaging for pelvic nodal involvement were 13% and 87%, respectively.

Conclusions: The accuracy of PET-CT imaging in predicting the pelvic nodal status is very low in patients with early-stage cervical cancer and is not able to replace lymphadenectomy.

Authors
Enrica Bentivegna, Catherine Uzan, Sebastien Gouy, Sophie Leboulleux, Pierre Duvillard, Jean Lumbroso, Christine Haie Meder, Martin Schlumberger, Philippe Morice
Relevant Conditions

Cervical Cancer