1. Clinical utility of positron emission tomography/computed tomography in inflammatory bowel disease.
- Author
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Lapp, Robert T., Spier, Bret J., Perlman, Scott B., Jaskowiak, Christine J., and Reichelderfer, Mark
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POSITRON emission tomography , *INFLAMMATORY bowel diseases , *COLONOSCOPY , *INTESTINES , *INFLAMMATION , *COLON (Anatomy) , *CLINICAL trials , *COMPUTED tomography , *TREATMENT effectiveness - Abstract
Purpose: The clinical utility of positron emission tomography/computed tomography (PET/CT) in comparison to standard workup in patients with known or suspected inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) is unknown.Procedures: Clinical data were collected on seven patients with known or suspected IBD undergoing PET/CT. Standard workup included history, physical exam, laboratory tests, colonoscopy and/or cross-sectional imaging. We divided the intestine into five regions [small bowel and four colon (ascending, transverse, descending and rectosigmoid)] and graded relative standard uptake values 0, 1, 2 or 3 by comparison to the liver, using a region-of-interest analysis (0 = no activity, 1 = liver, 2 and 3 = significant inflammation).Results: In patients 1 and 2, PET/CT demonstrated more activity than we thought clinically present. The other patients avoided unnecessary escalation or initiation of IBD therapy based on PET/CT results. Compared with standard workup, all seven patients had superior results when therapeutic decisions were based on PET/CT.Conclusions: We found PET/CT to be very useful in diagnosis and management in patients with known or suspected IBD. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2011
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