PET > PET tumor imaging > Musculoskeletal Tumors

J Nucl Med 2000 Oct;41(10):1695-701

Grading of tumors and tumorlike lesions of bone: evaluation by FDG PET.

Schulte M, Brecht-Krauss D, Heymer B, Guhlmann A, Hartwig E, Sarkar MR, Diederichs CG, Von Baer A, Kotzerke J, Reske SN.

Clinical diagnosis of skeletal tumors can be difficult, because such lesions compose a large, heterogeneous group of entities with different biologic behaviors. The aim of this prospective study was to assess the value of PET in grading tumors and tumorlike lesions of bone. METHODS: Two hundred two patients with suspected primary bone tumors were investigated using FDG PET. Uptake of FDG was evaluated semiquantitatively by determining the tumor-to-background ratio (T/B). All patients underwent biopsy, resulting in the histologic detection of 70 high-grade sarcomas, 21 low-grade sarcomas, 40 benign tumors, 47 tumorlike lesions, 6 osseous lymphomas, 6 plasmacytomas, and 12 metastases of an unknown primary tumor. RESULTS: All lesions, with the exception of 3 benign tumors, were detected by increased FDG uptake. Although sarcomas showed significantly higher T/Bs than did latent or active benign lesions (P < 0.001), aggressive benign lesions could not be distinguished from sarcomas. Using a T/B cutoff level for malignancy of 3.0, the sensitivity of FDG PET was 93.0%, the specificity was 66.7%, and the accuracy was 81.7%. CONCLUSION: FDG PET provides a promising tool for estimating the biologic activity of skeletal lesions, implicating consequences for the choice of surgical strategy.

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