Abstract

The objective of our study is to evaluate the diagnostic performance of positron emission tomography/computed tomography (PET-CT) for the assessment of lymph node involvement in advanced epithelial ovarian, fallopian tubal or peritoneal cancer (EOC). This was a retrospective, bicentric study. We included all patients over 18 years of age with a histological diagnosis of advanced EOC who had undergone PET-CT at the time of diagnosis or prior to cytoreduction surgery with pelvic or para-aortic lymphadenectomy. We included 145 patients with primary advanced EOC. The performance of PET-CT was calculated from the data of 63 patients. The sensitivity of PET-CT for preoperative lymph node evaluation was 26.7%, specificity was 90.9%, PPV was 72.7%, and NPV was 57.7%. The accuracy rate was 60.3%, and the false-negative rate was 34.9%. In the case of primary cytoreduction (n = 16), the sensitivity of PET-CT was 50%, specificity was 87.5%, PPV was 80%, and NPV was 63.6%. The accuracy rate was 68.8%, and the false negative rate was 25%. After neoadjuvant chemotherapy (n = 47), the sensitivity of PET-CT was 18.2%, specificity was 92%, PPV was 66.7%, and NPV was 56.1%. The accuracy rate was 57.5%, and the false negative rate was 38.3%. Due to its high specificity, the performance of a preoperative PET-CT scan could contribute to the de-escalation and reduction of lymphadenectomy in the surgical management of advanced EOC in a significant number of patients free of lymph node metastases.

Highlights

  • The objective of our study was to evaluate the diagnostic performance of positron emission tomography/computed tomography (PET-CT) for the assessment of lymph node involvement in advanced EOC

  • Had high specificity means that it was effective in confirming the absence of lymph node invasion on PET-CT in patients without lymph node metastasis

  • A low sensitivity related to its false negative rate may lead to the absence of lymph node surgical treatment in patients with lymph node invasion, which is contrary to the current practice of macroscopically complete surgery

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Summary

Introduction

Epithelial ovarian, fallopian tubal or peritoneal cancer (EOC) is the eighth most common cancer in women [1]. The prognosis for this cancer is poor, with 43% overall five-year survival for all stages [2]. The treatment of EOC in France was updated in 2018 with French guidelines published by the Haute Autorité de Santé (HAS) [2]. In early-stage EOC (international federation of gynecology and obstetrics (FIGO) stage. Pelvic and para-aortic lymphadenectomy is performed for staging purposes.

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