W. Frederick McGuirt MD, Kathryn M. Greven MD, John W.
Keyes MD,
Daniel W. Williams III MD,
Nat E. Watson, Jr. MD,
Kim R. Geisinger
MD, James O. Cappellari MD
Positron emission tomography (PET) is a relatively new radiologic imaging
technique based on glucose analog uptake and metabolism in tumor tissue.
In this study, PET was used in evaluating 38 patients with laryngeal cancer.
Twenty-five patients were examined with PET prior to treatment to study
the reliability of PET in identifying the primary tumor and assessing regional
nodal status; 13 patients who had previously received irradiation with
curative intent and who represented differential diagnostic problems were
imaged to differentiate between irradiation effects and recurrent or residual
cancer. Findings for both groups were compared to results of clinical evaluation
and those of computed tomography (CT) and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI).
The PET results were essentially identical to those of CT, MRI, and clinical
evaluation in identifying metastatic lesions (82% correct), and were as
reliable as CT and MRI for correctly identifying primary tumor (88%). Positron
emission tomography was most helpful in differentiating recurrent tumor
from postirradiation tissue sequelae. However, its lack of anatomic detail
made PET less valuable for primary staging and therapeutic planning. It
may enhance the diagnostic accuracy of CT and MRI where anatomic distortions
occur or where diagnostic criteria for CT and MRI are ambiguous.
KEY WORDS-cervical metastases, laryngeal carcinoma, laryngeal radionecrosis,
positron emission tomography. |