Abstract

Bone scintigraphy is a sensitive method for imaging bone metastases in patients with breast cancer. Despite its firm establishment in clinical routine, there are hardly any reliable data from larger homogeneous collectives on the value of bone scintigraphy in the context of staging of first diagnosed breast cancer patients. The aim of our work was to evaluate the real-life performance of bone scintigraphy as a staging examination in female patients with the initial diagnosis of breast cancer. We retrospectively evaluated the data of the patients examined in the year 2015 with the first diagnosis of breast cancer at the University Hospital Marburg by bone scintigraphy. In addition a follow-up over a period of 30 months after the first bone scintigraphy was performed. For this purpose we evaluated whether the results of this initial diagnostic could be confirmed in following diagnostic. 207/258 patients showed no suspicious findings in the initial bone scintigraphy, 48 had an unclear finding, which is why 42 patients received further diagnostics. In follow-up, new bone metastases were found in 4 patients, all of these had scintigraphic findings in the primary diagnosis, which were considered "unclear". Depending on the evaluation of the event (suspicious for metastasis/suspicious for metastasis and unclear), the sensitivity was 37.5%/100%, the specificity 100%/80%, the positive predictive value 100%/15.7% and the negative predictive value 98%/100%. By using bone scintigraphy and, if necessary, subsequent further imaging or histological clarification, a clinically significant diagnosis was obtained in 99,2% of the examined patients and confirmed in the follow-up. This result shows the good real-life performance of bone scintigraphy as a staging examination in patients with first diagnosed breast carcinomas.

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