In Vivo | 2021

Clinical Characteristics and Outcome of Pathologic N0 Non-small Cell Lung Cancer Patients With False Positive Mediastinal Lymph Node Metastasis on FDG PET-CT

 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Abstract


Background/Aim: Preoperative fluorine-18 fluorodeoxyglucose positron emission tomography/computed tomography (FDG PET-CT) is a non-invasive and useful diagnostic tool to evaluate mediastinal lymph node (LN) metastasis in lung cancer. However, there are often false-positive LN cases in FDG PET-CT. This study aimed to explore the clinical characteristics and outcome of pathologic N0 non-small cell lung cancer patients with false-positive mediastinal LN on FDG PET-CT. Patients and Methods: We enrolled 147 patients who underwent preoperative FDG PET-CT scan and mediastinal LN dissection. These patients were re-evaluated for post-operative pathologic nodal metastasis and divided into a false-positive group and a group of others. Results: Among 40 patients diagnosed with clinical N1-3 on FDG PET-CT, 19 (47.5%) patients were pathologic N0, meaning false-positive LN by PET-CT. Preoperative absolute platelet count and platelet-lymphocyte ratio were significantly higher in patients with pathologic N0. The presence of lymphatic invasion was significantly lower in patients with pathologic N0 than in the group of others. Recurrence-free survival was significantly shorter in patients with false positive LN than in patients with true positive LN or true negative LN at the same pathologic stage. Conclusion: Higher absolute platelet count and PLR, lower proportion of lymphatic invasion and shorter recurrence-free survival were associated with false positive mediastinal LN on preoperative FDG PET-CT.

Volume 35
Pages 1829 - 1836
DOI 10.21873/invivo.12444
Language English
Journal In Vivo

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