Staging of High-Risk Endometrial Cancer With PET/CT and Sentinel Lymph Node Mapping.

Mauro Signorelli, Cinzia Crivellaro, Alessandro Buda, Luca Guerra, Robert Fruscio, Federica Elisei, Carlotta Dolci, Marco Cuzzocrea, Rodolfo Milani, Cristina Messa
Author Information
  1. Mauro Signorelli: From the Departments of *Obstetrics and Gynecology, and †Nuclear Medicine, San Gerardo Hospital, Monza; ‡Tecnomed Foundation, and §University Milan-Bicocca, Milan, Italy.

Abstract

PURPOSE: The aim of this study was to evaluate the role of PET/CT and sentinel lymph node (SLN) biopsy in staging high-risk endometrial cancer patients (G2 and deep myometrial invasion, G3, serous clear cell carcinoma or carcinosarcoma) in early clinical stage.
PATIENTS AND METHODS: From January 2006 to December 2012, high-risk early-stage endometrial cancer patients performing PET/CT scan followed by surgery (systematic pelvic ± aortic lymphadenectomy) were included. From December 2010, SLN mapping with Tc-albumin nanocolloid and blue dye cervical injection was included in our clinical practice and additionally performed. Histological findings were used as the reference standard.
RESULTS: Ninety-three patients were included, of which 22 of 93 had both PET/CT and SLN biopsy. The median number of dissected lymph nodes (LNs) was 28. Nineteen women (20.4%) had pelvic LN metastases; 14 were correctly identified by PET/CT. Among 5 false-negative cases, 3 occurred after the introduction of SLN mapping due to detection of micrometastases by ultrastaging. On overall patient-based analysis, the sensitivity, specificity, accuracy, positive predictive value, and negative predictive value of PET/CT for pelvic LN metastases were 73.7%, 98.7%, 93.6%, 93.3%, 93.6%, respectively.
CONCLUSIONS: PET/CT demonstrated moderate sensitivity and high specificity in detecting pelvic LN metastases; its high positive predictive value (93.3%) is useful to refer patients to appropriate debulking surgery. Sentinel LN mapping and histological ultrastaging increased the identification of metastases (incidence, 18.3%-27.3%) not detectable by PET/CT because of its spatial resolution. The combination of both modalities is promising for nodal staging purpose.

MeSH Term

Adenocarcinoma, Clear Cell
Adult
Aged
Carcinosarcoma
Endometrial Neoplasms
Female
Humans
Lymphatic Metastasis
Middle Aged
Multimodal Imaging
Positron-Emission Tomography
Sentinel Lymph Node Biopsy
Tomography, X-Ray Computed

Word Cloud

Created with Highcharts 10.0.0PET/CT93SLNpatientspelvicLNmetastasesincludedmappingpredictivevalue3%lymphbiopsystaginghigh-riskendometrialcancerclinicalDecembersurgeryultrastagingsensitivityspecificitypositive7%6%highSentinelPURPOSE:aimstudyevaluaterolesentinelnodeG2deepmyometrialinvasionG3serousclearcellcarcinomacarcinosarcomaearlystagePATIENTSANDMETHODS:January20062012early-stageperformingscanfollowedsystematic±aorticlymphadenectomy2010Tc-albuminnanocolloidbluedyecervicalinjectionpracticeadditionallyperformedHistologicalfindingsusedreferencestandardRESULTS:Ninety-three22mediannumberdissectednodesLNs28Nineteenwomen204%14correctlyidentifiedAmong5false-negativecases3occurredintroductionduedetectionmicrometastasesoverallpatient-basedanalysisaccuracynegative7398respectivelyCONCLUSIONS:demonstratedmoderatedetectingusefulreferappropriatedebulkinghistologicalincreasedidentificationincidence183%-27detectablespatialresolutioncombinationmodalitiespromisingnodalpurposeStagingHigh-RiskEndometrialCancerLymphNodeMapping

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