Abstract

Abstract Clinical utility of Whole Body Low Dose CT scan for detecting bone metastasis in Breast cancer patients: A cross sectional study Background: Skeletal scintigraphy (Bone scan) is the imaging of choice to detect bone metastasis in locally advanced and metastatic breast cancer patients. Nuclear medicine facilities are however limited in their availability. As an alternative diagnostic modality to bone scan, we studied the diagnostic capability of Whole-Body Low Dose CT (WBLDCT) scan for detection of bone metastasis in these patients. Materials and Method: This cross-sectional study was conducted from November 2021 to May 2023 at a tertiary healthcare center in India with an aim to study the clinical applicability of whole-body low dose computed tomography scan for detecting bone metastasis in patients with breast cancer. Breast cancer patients with primary tumor measuring 5cm or more, pathologically proven axillary lymph node metastasis, Stage III/IV disease, symptoms attributable to metastasis and suspected disease recurrence were included. All patients underwent WBLDCT and Bone scan within a period of about 2 weeks. WBLDCT was done during the same time as conventional dose CT scan was being done as part of metastatic workup. WBLDCT acquisition protocol was set in CT scan machine by modulating the technical parameters like Care dose 4D-automated, Care kV semi, rotation time & noise index. The image analysis was performed by Radiologist and Nuclear medicine experts in a blinded fashion. Data was recorded in MS Excel sheet. Sensitivity, specificity, positive and negative predicative value, and concordance rates were calculated using SPSS software ver 25.0. Agreement amongst WBLDCT and Bone scan was calculated using Inter-rater agreement. p value < 0.05 was taken as significant. Results: 110 patients were enrolled in this study. The mean age of participants was 48.5 years and three fourth had stage III disease at presentation. Estrogen receptor positive disease was seen in 43.64% participants while 30% were triple negative. Her2neu positive disease was seen in 27.27% patients. Bone scan couldn’t be done in 03 patients who deferred treatment (these had no bone metastasis on WBLDCT). Both bone scan and WBLDCT detected bone metastasis in 19 patients. Bone scan picked up additional metastasis in three patients which were missed on WBLDCT. WBLDCT detected bone metastasis additionally in three patients which were not detected on Bone scan. Multiple lesions were most seen in vertebrae in 38.5% and 28.6% on bone scan and WBLDCT respectively. The sensitivity and specificity of WBLDCT for detection of bone metastasis was 86.36% and 96.47% respectively. The concordance rate between Bone scan and WBLDCT scan was 94.39% with an Inter-rater Kappa(k) quotient for agreement of 0.828 (p< 0.0001). Conclusion: WBLDCT scan has comparable diagnostic capability to skeletal scintigraphy in detecting bone metastasis in breast cancer and may be a useful alternative specially in resource limited settings. Table 1: Sensitivity, specificity, positive predictive value and negative predictive value of WBLDCT for detection of metastasis Variables Values Sensitivity (95% CI) 86.36% Specificity (95% CI) 96.47% AUC (95% CI) 0.91 Positive Predictive Value (95% CI) 86.36% Negative Predictive Value (95% CI) 96.47% Diagnostic accuracy 94.39% Inter-rater agreement (kappa) 0.828 Citation Format: Lipton Mitra, Suhani Suhani, Ankur Goyal, Rakesh Kumar, Mohit Joshi, Hemanga Bhattacharjee, Haresh KP, Raju Sharma, Rajinder Parshad. Clinical utility of whole body low dose computed tomography for detecting bone metastasis in breast cancer patients: A cross sectional study [abstract]. In: Proceedings of the 2023 San Antonio Breast Cancer Symposium; 2023 Dec 5-9; San Antonio, TX. Philadelphia (PA): AACR; Cancer Res 2024;84(9 Suppl):Abstract nr PO5-05-13.

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