4.7 Article

Significant CT dose reduction of 2-[18F]FDG PET/CT in pretreatment pediatric lymphoma without compromising the diagnostic and staging efficacy

Journal

EUROPEAN RADIOLOGY
Volume 33, Issue 3, Pages 2248-2257

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00330-022-09145-z

Keywords

Pediatric; Lymphoma; PET; CT; Dose reduction

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This study compared the diagnostic and staging efficacy of PET/DxCT and PET/LDCT in pediatric lymphoma patients. It found that PET/LDCT allowed for a significant reduction in CT effective dose without compromising diagnostic and staging efficacy.
Objectives To compare the diagnostic and staging efficacy of PET/diagnostic-level CT (PET/DxCT) and PET/low-dose CT (PET/LDCT) in pretreatment pediatric lymphoma patients and to estimate the reduction of the CT effective dose in the PET/CT scan. Methods One hundred and five pediatric patients who underwent total-body PET/CT examination were enrolled and divided into the DxCT group (n = 47) and LDCT group (n = 58) according to their dose levels. The sensitivity, specificity, PPV, and NPV of PET/DxCT and PET/LDCT for detecting the involvement of lymph node, spleen, bone marrow, and other extranodal organs in pretreatment lymphoma were compared. ROC analysis was performed to evaluate the integral efficiency. The staging accuracies based on PET/DxCT and PET/LDCT were also evaluated. Dosimetry was calculated for DxCT and LDCT, and the reduction in the effective dose was estimated. Results In the diagnosis of nodal, splenic, bone marrow, and other extranodal involvement, the differences in sensitivity, specificity, PPV, and NPV between PET/LDCT and PET/DxCT were not significant (all p values is an element of [0.332, 1.000]). Both modalities had accuracies above 90% and the ROC analysis indicated good or high efficiency in diagnosing all patterns of lymphoma involvement. PET/LDCT and PET/DxCT each had a staging accuracy of 89.7% and 89.4%, respectively. LDCT had a comparable image quality score with DxCT, with a significant increase in noise (p < 0.001) and a 66.1% reduction in effective dose. Conclusions PET/LDCT allowed for a 66.1% CT effective dose reduction compared to PET/DxCT in pediatric lymphoma patients without compromising the diagnostic and staging efficacy.

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