Back to Search
Start Over
The potential predictive value of MRI and PET-CT in mucinous and nonmucinous rectal cancer to identify patients at high risk of metastatic disease
- Publication Year :
- 2017
-
Abstract
- Objective: To correlate imaging parameters from baseline MRI diffusion-weighted imaging (DWI) and fludeoxyglucose (FDG) positron emission tomography (PET)-CT with synchronous and metachronous metastases in mucinous carcinoma (MC) and non-mucinous carcinoma (NMC) rectal cancer. Methods: 111 patients with extraperitoneal locally advanced rectal cancer, who underwent pelvic MRI, DWI and FDG PET-CT, were stratified into MC (n523) and NMC (n588). We correlated adverse morphologic features on MRI [mT4, mesorectal fascia involvement, extramural venous invasion (mEMVI), mN2] and quantitative imaging parameters [minimum apparent diffusion coefficient (ADCmin), maximum standardized uptake value, total lesion glycolysis, metabolic tumour volume, T2 weighted and DWI tumour volumes] with the presence of metastatic disease. All patients underwent preoperative chemoradiation therapy (CRT); 100/111 patients underwent surgery after CRT and were classified as pathological complete response (PCR) and no PCR [tumour regression grade (TRG)1 vs TRG2-5] and as ypN0 and ypN1-2. Median follow-up time was 48 months. Metastases were confirmed on FDG PET-CT and contrastenhanced multidetector CT. Results: The percentage of mucin measured by MRI correlates with that quantified by histology. On multivariate analysis, the synchronous metastases were correlated with mEMVI [odds ratio (OR) 5 21.48, p,0.01] and low ADCmin (OR50.04, p50.038) in NMC. The difference of metachronous recurrence between the MC group (10-90% mucin) and NMC group was significant (p,0.01) (OR521.67, 95% confidence interval 3.8-120.5). Metachronous metastases were correlated with ypN2 (OR58.24, p50.01) in MC and in NMC. In NMC, mEMVI correlated with no PCR (p50.018) and ypN2 (p,0.01). Conclusion: mEMVI could identify patients with NMC, who are at high risk of synchronous metastases. The MC group is at a high risk of developing metachronous metastases. Advances in knowledge: Patients at high risk of metastases are more likely t
Details
- Database :
- OAIster
- Notes :
- English
- Publication Type :
- Electronic Resource
- Accession number :
- edsoai.on1105028616
- Document Type :
- Electronic Resource