Abstract
Abstract
Background
18F-fluorodeoxyglucose (FDG) PET/CT is a noninvasive imaging tool that has been used successfully for the diagnosis, staging, restaging, therapy monitoring, and prognostic prediction of ovarian cancer. For ovarian cancer surveillance, rising CA-125 levels raise the suspicion of recurrence despite its reported low specificity; being elevated in other benign and inflammatory conditions, and thus, confirmation is required. This work aimed to evaluate the role of 18F-FDG PET/CT in suspected ovarian cancer recurrence in patients presenting with elevated CA-125 levels.
Results
Fifty female patients with suspected ovarian cancer recurrence owing to elevated CA-125 levels were included in this study. Recurrence was confirmed in 46/50 cases whether by histopathological confirmation or by serial follow-up imaging and clinical follow-up. Positive PET/CT findings were reported in 45/50 cases with 2 false-negative cases and 1 false-positive case. PET/CT examination was found to be superior to contrast-enhanced CT in the detection of peritoneal metastatic nodules and metastatic lymph nodes. According to this study, the estimated sensitivity, specificity, and overall diagnostic accuracy of PET/CT in the detection of recurrent ovarian cancer were 95.6%, 75%, and 94%, respectively.
Conclusions
In ovarian cancer surveillance, 18F-FDG PET/CT was found to be a sensitive and accurate noninvasive imaging tool that can be used in the detection of recurrent ovarian cancer in patients with elevated CA-125 levels, thus interfering with the management plan. The advantage of whole-body imaging in PET/CT allows for the detection and precise localization of recurrent or metastatic foci in abdominal and extra-abdominal sites as well.
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Subject
Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging
Reference21 articles.
1. Evangelista L, Palma MD, Gregianin M, Nardin M, Roma A, Nicoletto MO, Narde lli GB, Zagonel V (2015) Diagnostic and prognostic evaluation of fluorodeoxyglucose positron emission tomography/computed tomography and its correlation with serum cancer antigen-125 (CA125) in a large cohort of ovarian cancer patients. J Turk Ger Gynecol Assoc 16:137–144
2. Sun J, Cui XW, Li YS, Wang SY, Yin Q, Wang XN, Gu L (2020) The value of 18F-FDG PET/CT imaging combined with detection of CA125 and HE4 in the diagnosis of recurrence and metastasis of ovarian cancer. Eur Rev Med Pharmacol Sci 24(13):7276–7283
3. Khiewvan B, Torigian DA, Emamzadehfard S, Paydary K, Salavati A, Houshmand S, Werner TJ, Alavi A (2017) An update on the role of PET/CT and PET/MRI in ovarian cancer. Eur J Nucl Med Mol Imaging 44:1079–1091
4. Rao S, Smith DA, Guler E, Kikano EG, Rajdev MA, Yoest JM, Ramaiya NH, Tirumani SH (2021) Past, present, and future of serum tumor markers in management of ovarian cancer: a guide for the radiologist. Radiographics 41:1839–1856
5. Yang ZJ, Zhao BB, Li L (2016) The significance of the change pattern of serum CA125 level for judging prognosis and diagnosing recurrences of epithelial ovarian cancer. J Ovarian Res 9:57