Publication

Assessment of pancreatic colloid carcinoma using F-FDG PET/CT compared with MRI and enhanced CT

Journal Paper/Review - May 31, 2018

Units
PubMed
Doi

Citation
Jiang L, Tang Q, Panje C, Nie H, Zhao G, Shi H. Assessment of pancreatic colloid carcinoma using F-FDG PET/CT compared with MRI and enhanced CT. Oncol Lett 2018; 16:1557-1564.
Type
Journal Paper/Review (English)
Journal
Oncol Lett 2018; 16
Publication Date
May 31, 2018
Issn Print
1792-1074
Pages
1557-1564
Brief description/objective

Pancreatic colloid carcinoma (CC) is a rare sub-type of pancreatic adenocarcinoma which has an improved prognosis compared with pancreatic ductal carcinoma. Consequently, the early detection of CC by imaging may be of great significance in guiding patient management and therapeutic decisions. The present study aimed to analyze F-FDG PET/CT findings of CC in comparison to MRI and CT. PET/CT findings in 5 patients with CC were retrospectively reviewed based on visual interpretation and semi-quantitative index of SUV and TNR. Four patients received dual-time-point PET/CT scans. Additionally, one patient underwent contrast-enhanced CT scan, one MRI, and three received both. A total of five lesions were detected in five patients. Visually, two cases presented with mild FDG uptake, two with moderate and one with high. The mean of SUV and TNR was 5.1±2.2 and 2.8±0.7, respectively. Compared with CCs with low SUV, CCs with high SUV were more aggressive. No distant metastases were observed in five cases. Among four patients with dual-time-point PET/CT imaging, SUV increased in three cases and decreased in one case. The mean early and delayed SUV were 4.2±1.1 and 4.7±1.9, respectively (P>0.05). Radiological findings mainly included septated cystic components, internal sponge-like contrast-enhancement, calcification and 'salt-and-pepper sign' on MRI T2-weighted imaging. Thus, PET/CT provided additional information on metabolic tumor activity as well as locoregional and distant staging, which are important prognostic markers and may improve further patient management. However, PET/CT did not show any findings in addition to MRI and contrast-enhanced CT that were unique to CC and allowed a clear differentiation from other pancreatic malignancies.