4.6 Article

Prone versus Supine FDG PET/CT in the Staging of Breast Cancer

Journal

DIAGNOSTICS
Volume 13, Issue 3, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/diagnostics13030367

Keywords

FDG PET; CT; prone acquisition; breast cancer; nuclear; staging

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Prone FDG PET/CT acquisition is more effective than supine acquisition in detecting primary breast lesions and metastatic lymph nodes in breast cancer patients. It showed higher sensitivity and specificity in detecting breast tumor lesions and FDG-avid axillary lymph nodes. The prone position also had significantly higher detection rate and SUVmax for axillary lymph nodes. This technique has the potential to change patient staging and management.
Supine [18F]Fluorodeoxyglucose (FDG) positron emission technology/computed tomography (PET/CT) is a commonly used modality for the initial staging of breast cancer, and several previous studies have shown superior sensitivity and specificity of prone FDG PET/CT in comparison to its supine counterpart. This retrospective study included 25 females with breast cancer referred for staging. They underwent supine FDG PET/CT followed by prone FDG PET/CT. The outcomes were: number of primary breast lesions, anatomical site of FDG-avid lymph nodes (LNs), and number and type of bone lesions, with SUVmax of all corresponding parameters. Performance was superior in prone acquisition compared to supine acquisition, with the respective results: 29 vs. 22 breast tumor lesions detected, 62 vs. 27 FDG-avid axillary LNs detected, sensitivity of 68% vs. 57%, specificity of 64% vs. 53%. The detection rate of axillary LNs in the prone position was significantly higher (p = 0.001). SUVmax for breast tumor lesions (p = 0.000) and number of detected axillary LNs (p = 0.002) were significantly higher in prone acquisition. Five patients were upstaged after experts read the prone acquisition. Prone FDG PET/CT acquisition is a promising technique in detecting primary breast lesions and metastatic LNs possibly missed in supine acquisition, which may lead to change in patient staging and management.

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