Objective: To evaluate the diagnostic accuracy of PET/computed tomography (CT) in detecting marrow infiltration in indolent non-Hodgkin lymphoma (NHL) with histopathological correlation.
Methods: All treatment-naive newly diagnosed indolent NHL with staging PET/CT were retrospectively evaluated for marrow infiltration and categorized on the basis of the PET/CT uptake pattern: normal (PET/CT negative), focal/diffuse (PET/CT positive). Bone marrow biopsy (BMB) was considered the standard, except in focal PET/CT uptake, which was confirmed to be positive or negative by serial PET/CT. The BMB pattern was assessed as diffuse and nondiffuse and the degree of lymphoid infiltration was documented.
Results: Forty-six patients (mean age 59 ± 15 years) were evaluated. In the PET/CT-positive group of 22 cases (diffuse = 15, focal = 7), BMB was positive in 21 cases. In 80% of diffuse PET/CT uptake cases, a diffuse BMB infiltrative pattern was observed. However, in cases with focal PET/CT uptake, no predominant histological pattern was observed. No correlation was found between semiquantitative uptake and degree of lymphoid infiltration on BMB (r = 0.2, P = 0.434). In the PET/CT-negative group of 24 cases, 20 cases were BMB negative and four cases were positive. The overall diagnostic accuracy of PET/CT in determining marrow infiltration was 89% (sensitivity 84%, specificity 95%, positive predictive value 95% and negative predictive value 83%).
Conclusion: PET/CT showed high specificity and positive predictive value with moderate accuracy in detecting marrow disease in indolent NHL. The metabolic uptake lacked a significant correlation with the degree of lymphoid infiltration, but a potential relationship may exist between the pattern of metabolic uptake and the BMB infiltrative pattern.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/MNM.0000000000000361 | DOI Listing |
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