Home Community PET PET scans can help lung cancer diagnosis

PET scans can help lung cancer diagnosis

Communities

The use of positron emission tomography, known as PET scans, can improve the diagnosis of people with lung cancer and better guide treatment decisions, according to Canadian researchers.

by Will Dunham

The use of positron emission tomography, known as PET scans, can improve the diagnosis of people with lung cancer and better guide treatment decisions, Canadian researchers said on Tuesday.

Doctors often use imaging techniques like magnetic resonance imaging, MRI, or computed tomography imaging, called CT scans, along with other methods to see if a patient has lung cancer.

But researchers led by Dr. Yee Ung of the Odette Cancer Centre at Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre in Toronto analyzed the results of several recent studies to see if PET scans might do the job better.

PET scans detect biochemical processes in the body that may indicate disease before the appearance of anatomical changes that other methods like MRIs and CT scans may detect.

PET scans can also accurately differentiate between malignant and benign tumors in the lung as small as four-tenths of an inch (1 cm), according to the study published in the Journal of the National Cancer Institute.

These scans can correctly distinguish between extensive and limited disease in people with small cell lung cancer, a fast-growing type that spreads more quickly than the more commonplace non-small cell lung cancer, the researchers said.

PET scans seem to be superior to CT scans for guiding treatment decisions in non-small cell lung cancer, they said.

The findings seem to support the idea of broader use of PET scans in lung cancer diagnosis and treatment, although more research is needed, Ung said in a telephone interview.

"Things that we cannot see with CT scans we are now able to pick up on the PET scans and, therefore, we're able to offer better and more appropriate treatment," Ung said.

"We still need to do very good clinical trials to see where PET scans fit into the overall treatment strategy," Ung added.

Staging patients

One key to treatment of lung cancer is how accurate doctors are in ‘staging’ patients -- finding out how much cancer there is in the body and where it is located, to figure how advanced it is -- to give the most appropriate treatment, Ung said.

"So if you have somebody who truly has lung cancer confined to the chest, without being spread outside the chest, you would treat that very aggressively with a combination of surgery and/or chemotherapy and radiation, if indicated," Ung said.

"If the lung cancer is too far advanced where it's already spread outside of the chest area, then we cannot cure it, and then we don't want to put people through unnecessary treatment like putting them through surgery or putting them through high-dose radiation," Ung added.

PET scan equipment is less widely available than CT scan and MRI equipment, but generally is in use in larger medical institutions, according to Frederic Fahey, director of nuclear medicine physics and PET at Children's Hospital Boston.

(Editing by Cynthia Osterman)


Source: Reuters

Tags: PET - scans - can - help - lung - cancer - diagnosis
Trackback(0)
Comments (0)Add Comment

Write comment
smaller | bigger

busy
 

Related Articles

PET Products

PET Companies

PET Join Group

Description: Keep up-to-date with news, discussions, and network with thought leaders regarding positron-emission tomography.
Created: August 25, 2009, 5:43 pm
Owner: Christiaan van den Hout

Latest News

March 19, 2010, 11:10 am By Deepa FDG-PET for Vulvar Carcinoma Diagnosis Positron emission tomography (PET) can play a useful diagnostic role for patients with vulvar carcinoma, researchers said at the Society of Gynecologic Oncologists (SGO) 41st Annual Meeting on Women's...
March 19, 2010, 9:00 am By Deepa PET/CT for Detects Neuroendocrine Tumours Metastases PET/CT Best Imaging Method for Detecting Neuroendocrine Tumours Metastases to the Heart, researchers presented at the 7th Annual European Neuroendocrine Tumor Society (ENETS) Conference. Read more....
March 17, 2010, 10:56 am By Deepa Alzheimer's Early Detection With PET Scan Westside Medical Associates of Los Angeles and Westside Medical Imaging (WMI) of Beverly Hills announce the benefit of early positron emission tomography (PET) scanning to identify Alzheimer's in its ...
March 15, 2010, 11:20 am By Deepa PET/CT Usage Rejected for Breast Cancer Diagnoses The usage of positron emission tomography/ computer-assisted tomography (PET/CT) imaging was generally rejected for use in diagnosing breast cancer. Read more....
March 10, 2010, 9:49 am By Deepa FDG-PET May Identify Occult Metastases A small phase 2 study suggests that 17-fluorodeoxyglucose positron-emission tomography (FDG-PET) may help identify occult masses after orchiectomy for stage 1 seminoma, said researchers here at the 20...
Discussions in PET

Paul Keough
November 2, 2009, 1:43 pm ASTRO Sun Nov 1st: Integrating New and Emerging Modalities into Radiation Therapy Daivd Kirsh, MD, PhD, gave an excellent presentation, comment on your thoughts on these topics he raised:How FDG-PET can be used to predict outcome to radiation therapy?  

Paul Keough
October 5, 2009, 1:42 pm When is PET the best choice for visualization? Given all the imaging choices available, when is the best quality, price, radiation exposure, to use PET?
Comments in PET
No Comments added yet.
Members
View all