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Anticancer research · May 2000
Comparative StudyComparison and discrepancy of 18F-2-deoxyglucose positron emission tomography and Tc-99m MDP bone scan to detect bone metastases.
- C H Kao, J F Hsieh, S C Tsai, Y J Ho, and R F Yen.
- Department of Nuclear Medicine, Taichung Veterans General Hospital, Taiwan. kao@vghtc.vghtc.gov.tw
- Anticancer Res. 2000 May 1; 20 (3B): 2189-92.
AbstractThe purpose of this study was to evaluate the usefulness of positron emission tomography with 18F-2-deoxyglucose (FDG-PET) for the detection of malignant bone metastases, and to compare FDG-PET results with conventional technetium-99m methylene diophosphate (Tc-99m MDP) bone scan findings. Twenty-four patients (10 females, 14 males, ages: 39-71 years) with biopsy-proven malignancy and suspected bone metastases, underwent whole body FDG-PET and bone scan to detect bone metastases. Bone metastases were established in 39 discordant bone lesions by histopathological examination of biopsy samples, MRI/CT, and follow-up bone scan/FDG-PET findings showing progressively and extensively widespread bone lesions. A total of 98 bone lesions found on either FDG-PET or bone scan were evaluated For 39 bone lesions with discordant findings between FDG-PET and bone scan, histopathological examination, MRI/CT and follow-up bone scan/FDG-PET findings revealed 8 metastatic and 0 benign bone lesions with positive FDG-PET findings, not detected on bone scan. Eleven metastatic and 20 benign bone lesions with positive bone scan findings were not detected on FDG-PET. FDG-PET has a better specificity, but a lower sensitivity for detecting malignant bone metastases when compared with bone scan.
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