4.2 Article

Evaluation of accuracy for18F-FDGpositron emission tomography and computed tomography for detection of lymph node metastasis in canine oral malignant melanoma

Journal

VETERINARY AND COMPARATIVE ONCOLOGY
Volume 19, Issue 3, Pages 463-472

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/vco.12651

Keywords

animals; cancer; metastasis; PET-CT; staging

Funding

  1. University of California, Davis Center for Companion Animal Health [2016-13-F, 2016-06-F]

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In this study, PET/CT imaging was used for dogs with oral malignant melanoma, showing high sensitivity but caution needed for specificity improvement. PET techniques demonstrated 100% sensitivity, with SUV evaluation increasing specificity. Careful parameter and threshold selection is critical to ensure PET specificity in diagnosing canine OMM.
Tumour stage has been demonstrated to have prognostic significance in canine oral malignant melanoma (OMM). Various evaluation techniques of positron emission tomography/computed tomography (PET/CT) have been reported for staging of head-and-neck tumours in people, but canine-specific data are limited, and reports for CT accuracy have been variable. In this prospective study, the head/neck of client-owned dogs with cytologically or histologically diagnosed OMM were imaged with(18)Fluorine-fluorodeoxyglucose (F-18-FDG) PET/ CT. Bilateral mandibular lymphadenectomy was performed for histopathologic assessment. Two evaluation techniques for CT and PET were applied by four independent observers. CT evaluation utilized both a standardized grading scheme and a subjective clinical interpretation. PET evaluation was first performed solely on(18)F-FDG-uptake in lymph nodes compared to background on a truncated scan excluding the oral cavity. Subsequently, the entire head/neck scan and standardized uptake value (SUV) measurements were available. Receiver operating characteristic analysis was performed with histopathology as gold standard. Twelve dogs completed the study and metastatic OMM was identified in six mandibular lymph nodes from five dogs. Of the CT-interpretation techniques, use of clinical grading performed best (sensitivity = 83% and specificity = 94%). Both PET techniques resulted in 100% sensitivity, but primary tumour site evaluation and use of SUV increased specificity from 78% to 94%. The SUVmax cut-point, 3.3, led to 100% sensitivity and 83% specificity. In this population of dogs, PET appeared to be highly sensitive but at risk of being less specific without use of appropriate parameters and thresholds.

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