Abstract

This study aimed to estimate the prevalence of indeterminate pulmonary nodules and specific radiological and clinical characteristics that predict malignancy of these at initial staging chest computed tomography (CT) in patients with colorectal cancer. A considerable number of indeterminate pulmonary nodules, which cannot readily be classified as either benign or malignant, are detected at initial staging chest CT in colorectal cancer patients. A systematic review based on a search in EMBASE, Medline, the Cochrane library and science citation index, PubMed databases, Google scholar, and relevant conference proceedings was performed in cooperation with the Cochrane Colorectal Cancer Group. A total of 2,799 studies were identified, of which 12 studies met the inclusion criteria. The studies primarily consisted of case series and included a total of 5,873 patients. Of these patients, 9% (95% confidence interval [95% CI] 8.9-9.2%) had indeterminate pulmonary nodules at chest CT, of which 10.8% (95% CI 10.3-11.2%) turned out to be colorectal cancer metastases at follow-up. Generally, regional lymph node metastasis, and multiple numbers of indeterminate pulmonary nodules were reported to predict malignancy, whereas calcification of the nodules indicated benign lesions. It was found that 1 in 100 colorectal cancer patients subjected to preoperative staging chest CT will have an indeterminate pulmonary nodule that proves to be metastatic disease. Such a low risk suggests that indeterminate pulmonary nodules should not cause further preoperative diagnostic workup or follow-up besides routine regimens.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call