PET-CT vs brain MRI for the detection of cerebral metastases of melanoma, a 5-year retrospective study.
Journal
Clinical and experimental dermatology
ISSN: 1365-2230
Titre abrégé: Clin Exp Dermatol
Pays: England
ID NLM: 7606847
Informations de publication
Date de publication:
16 Apr 2024
16 Apr 2024
Historique:
received:
05
03
2024
revised:
01
04
2024
accepted:
12
04
2024
medline:
16
4
2024
pubmed:
16
4
2024
entrez:
16
4
2024
Statut:
aheadofprint
Résumé
Melanoma patients present a high risk of developing extra cutaneous metastases. PET-CT is one of the preferred examinations for the staging of oncological patients. It is not the method of choice to detect brain metastases, but this technique has shown significant improvement and allows the detection of some of them, although it is unclear how it performs compared to the MRI, the current gold standard for diagnosing brain metastases. To compare the accuracy of PET-CT and cerebral MRI to detect brain metastases in melanoma patients. We retrospectively included all patients diagnosed with melanoma stage IIC-IV (AJCC 8th Edition-2017) presented at the skin tumor board of the University Hospital of Bern between 01/2018 and 12/2022. All radiological reports extracted from the patient management system were analyzed to assess a discrepancy between the visibility of brain metastases on PET-CT and brain MRI. In this study including 393 patients, brain MRI demonstrated significantly higher performance than PET-CT in detecting brain metastases. Cerebral metastases were detected completely, partially or were not detected by PET-CT in respectively 2 patients (4%), 15 patients (32%) and 30 patients (64%) out of 47. Despite the increasing performance of PET-CT, this study highlights the crucial role of brain MRI, which remains the gold standard to detect cerebral metastases. Brain MRI should be performed on patients with high-risk melanoma from stage IIC to exclude brain metastases.
Sections du résumé
BACKGROUND
BACKGROUND
Melanoma patients present a high risk of developing extra cutaneous metastases. PET-CT is one of the preferred examinations for the staging of oncological patients. It is not the method of choice to detect brain metastases, but this technique has shown significant improvement and allows the detection of some of them, although it is unclear how it performs compared to the MRI, the current gold standard for diagnosing brain metastases.
OBJECTIVE
OBJECTIVE
To compare the accuracy of PET-CT and cerebral MRI to detect brain metastases in melanoma patients.
METHODS
METHODS
We retrospectively included all patients diagnosed with melanoma stage IIC-IV (AJCC 8th Edition-2017) presented at the skin tumor board of the University Hospital of Bern between 01/2018 and 12/2022. All radiological reports extracted from the patient management system were analyzed to assess a discrepancy between the visibility of brain metastases on PET-CT and brain MRI.
RESULTS
RESULTS
In this study including 393 patients, brain MRI demonstrated significantly higher performance than PET-CT in detecting brain metastases. Cerebral metastases were detected completely, partially or were not detected by PET-CT in respectively 2 patients (4%), 15 patients (32%) and 30 patients (64%) out of 47.
CONCLUSION
CONCLUSIONS
Despite the increasing performance of PET-CT, this study highlights the crucial role of brain MRI, which remains the gold standard to detect cerebral metastases. Brain MRI should be performed on patients with high-risk melanoma from stage IIC to exclude brain metastases.
Identifiants
pubmed: 38624009
pii: 7646276
doi: 10.1093/ced/llae129
pii:
doi:
Types de publication
Journal Article
Langues
eng
Sous-ensembles de citation
IM
Informations de copyright
© The Author(s) 2024. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of British Association of Dermatologists.