Additional Primary Tumors Detected Incidentally on FDG PET/CT at Staging in Patients with First Diagnosis of NSCLC: Frequency, Impact on Patient Management and Survival

Author:

Kudura Ken12,Ritz Nando3,Templeton Arnoud J.34ORCID,Kissling Marc2,Kutzker Tim5,Foerster Robert6ORCID,Hoffmann Martin H. K.12,Antwi Kwadwo12,Kreissl Michael C.7ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Nuclear Medicine, Sankt Clara Hospital, 4058 Basel, Switzerland

2. Department of Radiology, Sankt Clara Hospital, 4058 Basel, Switzerland

3. Faculty of Medicine, University of Basel, 4001 Basel, Switzerland

4. Sankt Clara Research, 4002 Basel, Switzerland

5. Faculty of Applied Statistics, Humboldt University, 10117 Berlin, Germany

6. Department of Radiooncology, Cantonal Hospital Winterthur, 8400 Winterthur, Switzerland

7. Division of Nuclear Medicine, Department of Radiology and Nuclear Medicine, University Hospital Magdeburg, 39120 Magdeburg, Germany

Abstract

We aimed to assess the frequency of additional primary malignancies detected incidentally on [18F]fluoro-D-glucose positron emission tomography/computed tomography (FDG-PET/CT) at staging in NSCLC patients. Moreover, their impact on patient management and survival was assessed. Consecutive NSCLC patients with available staging FDG-PET/CT between 2020 and 2021 were retrospectively enrolled. We reported whether further investigations of suspicious findings presumably not related to NSCLC were recommended and performed after FDG-PET/CT. Any additional imaging, surgery or multimodal management was considered as an impact on patient management. Patient survival was defined using overall survival OS and progression-free survival PFS. A total of 125 NSCLC patients were included, while 26 findings in 26 different patients were suspicious for an additional malignancy on FDG-PET/CT at staging. The most frequent anatomical site was the colon. A total of 54.2% of all additional suspicious lesions turned out to be malignant. Almost every malignant finding had an impact on patient management. No significant differences were found between NSCLC patients with suspicious findings versus no suspicious findings with regards to their survival. FDG-PET/CT performed for staging might be a valuable tool to identify additional primary tumors in NSCLC patients. Identification of additional primary tumors might have substantial implications for patient management. An early detection together with interdisciplinary patient management could prevent a worsening of survival compared to patients with NSCLC only.

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Cancer Research,Oncology

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