Abstract
To evaluate the clinical performance of the lesion-to-cerebellum uptake ratio (LCR), a semiquantitative index for differentiating malignant from benign lung nodules with [F]fluorodeoxyglucose positron emission tomography (F-FDG PET). Thirty-six patients (16 females, 20 males; median age, 73 years; range, 41-87 years) with 42 known or suspected malignant lung nodules underwent whole-body PET imaging after an intravenous injection of a mean dose of 543+/-69 MBq (14.7+/-1.9 mCi) of F-FDG. The standardized uptake value (SUV) and the LCR were calculated for each nodule and receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curves were analysed using the ROCKIT 0.9B software package. Surgical pathology and follow-up with serial computed tomography scans for at least 24 months revealed 18 malignant lung lesions and 24 benign lesions less than 3.0 cm in size. The mean LCR was 0.70+/-0.40 for malignant nodules and 0.23+/-0.12 for benign nodules (P<0.001, two-tailed test). The area under the estimated ROC curve was 0.8660 for SUV data and 0.9197 for LCR data (P=0.2408, two-tailed test). The LCR method appears to be a valuable semiquantitative index for the evaluation of malignancy in pulmonary nodules with F-FDG PET, which is simple to perform clinically and does not require accurate measurements of body weight or the residual activity in the syringe utilized for F-FDG injection.
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