Staging Evaluation
Evaluation of mediastinal lymph node metastasis
Surgical evaluation
Surgical
staging of the mediastinum is considered standard if accurate evaluation of the
nodal status is needed to determine therapy.
Accurate
staging of the mediastinal lymph nodes provides important prognostic
information.
Evidence
(nodal status):
- The association between survival and the
number of examined lymph nodes during surgery for patients with stage I
NSCLC treated with definitive surgical resection was assessed from the
population-based Surveillance, Epidemiology and End Results database for the
period from 1990 to 2000.[3] A total of 16,800 patients were
included in the study.
o
The
overall survival (OS) analysis for patients without radiation therapy
demonstrated that in comparison to the reference group (one to four lymph
nodes), patients with five to eight lymph nodes examined during surgery had a
modest but statistically significant increase in survival, with a proportionate
hazard ratio (HR) of 0.90 (95% confidence interval [CI], 0.84–0.97). For
patients with 9 to 12 lymph nodes and 13 to 16 lymph nodes examined, HRs were
0.86 (95% CI, 0.79–0.95) and 0.78 (95% CI, 0.68–0.90), respectively. There
appeared to be no incremental improvement after evaluating more than 16 lymph
nodes. The corresponding results for lung cancer–specific mortality and for
patients receiving radiation therapy were not substantially different.
o
These
results indicate that patient survival following resection for NSCLC is
associated with the number of lymph nodes evaluated during surgery. Because
this is most likely the result of a reduction-of-staging error, namely, a
decreased likelihood of missing positive lymph nodes with an increasing number
of lymph nodes sampled, it suggests that an evaluation of nodal status should
include 11 to 16 lymph nodes.
CT imaging
CT scanning
is primarily used for determining the size of the tumor. The CT scan should
extend inferiorly to include the liver and adrenal glands. MRI scans of the
thorax and upper abdomen do not appear to yield advantages over CT scans.[4]
Evidence
(CT scan):
- A systematic review of the medical
literature relating to the accuracy of CT scanning for noninvasive staging
of the mediastinum in patients with lung cancer has been conducted. In the
35 studies published between 1991 and June 2006, 5,111 evaluable patients
were identified. Almost all studies specified that CT scanning was
performed following the administration of IV contrast material and that a
positive test result was defined as the presence of one or more lymph
nodes that measured larger than 1 cm on the short-axis diameter.[5]
o
The
median prevalence of mediastinal metastasis was 28% (range, 18%–56%).
o
The
pooled sensitivity and specificity of CT scanning for identifying mediastinal
lymph node metastasis were 51% (95% CI, 47%–54%) and 86% (95% CI, 84%–88%),
respectively. The corresponding positive and negative likelihood ratios were
3.4 and 0.6, respectively.
- The results from the systematic review are
similar to those of a large meta-analysis that reported the median
sensitivity and specificity of CT scanning for identifying malignant
mediastinal nodes as 61% and 79%, respectively.[6]
- An earlier meta-analysis reported average
sensitivity and specificity of 64% and 74%, respectively.[7]
FDG-PET scanning
The wider
availability and use of FDG-PET scanning for staging has modified the approach
to staging mediastinal lymph nodes and distant metastases.
Randomized
trials evaluating the utility of FDG-PET scanning in potentially resectable
NSCLC report conflicting results in terms of the relative reduction in the
number of noncurative thoracotomies.
Although
the current evidence is conflicting, FDG-PET scanning may improve results of
early-stage lung cancer by identifying patients who have evidence of metastatic
disease that is beyond the scope of surgical resection and that is not evident
by standard preoperative staging procedures.
Evidence
(FDG-PET scan):
- A systematic review, an expansion of a
health technology assessment conducted in 2001 by the Institute for
Clinical and Evaluative Sciences, evaluated the accuracy and utility of
FDG-PET scanning in the diagnosis and staging of lung cancer.[8] Through a systematic search of the
literature, 12 evidence summary reports and 15 prospective studies of the
diagnostic accuracy of FDG-PET scanning were identified. FDG-PET scanning
appears to be superior to CT imaging for mediastinal staging in NSCLC.
FDG-PET scanning also appears to have high sensitivity and reasonable
specificity for differentiating benign from malignant lesions as small as
1 cm.
- A systematic review of the medical
literature relating to the accuracy of FDG-PET scanning for noninvasive
staging of the mediastinum in patients with lung cancer identified 44
studies published between 1994 and 2006 with 2,865 evaluable patients.[5] The median prevalence of mediastinal
metastases was 29% (range, 5%–64%). Pooled estimates of sensitivity and
specificity for identifying mediastinal metastasis were 74% (95% CI,
69%–79%) and 85% (95% CI, 82%–88%), respectively. Corresponding positive
and negative likelihood ratios for mediastinal staging with FDG-PET
scanning were 4.9 and 0.3, respectively. These findings demonstrate that
FDG-PET scanning is more accurate than CT scanning for staging of the
mediastinum in patients with lung cancer.
Cost effectiveness of FDG-PET
scanning
Decision
analyses demonstrate that FDG-PET scanning may reduce the overall costs of medical
care by identifying patients with falsely negative CT scans in the mediastinum
or otherwise undetected sites of metastases.[9-11] Studies concluded that the money saved by
forgoing mediastinoscopy in FDG-PET-positive mediastinal lesions was not
justified because of the unacceptably high number of false-positive results.[9-11] A randomized study found that the addition
of FDG-PET scanning to conventional staging was associated with significantly
fewer thoracotomies.[12] A second randomized trial evaluating the
impact of FDG-PET scanning on clinical management found that FDG-PET scanning
provided additional information regarding appropriate stage but did not lead to
significantly fewer thoracotomies.[13]
Combination of CT imaging and FDG-PET scanning
The combination
of CT imaging and FDG-PET scanning has greater sensitivity and specificity than
CT imaging alone.[14]
Evidence
(CT/FDG-PET scan):
- If there is no evidence of distant
metastatic disease on CT scan, FDG-PET scanning complements CT scan
staging of the mediastinum. Numerous nonrandomized studies of FDG-PET
scanning have evaluated mediastinal lymph nodes using surgery (i.e., mediastinoscopy
and/or thoracotomy with mediastinal lymph node dissection) as the gold
standard of comparison.
- In a meta-analysis evaluating the
conditional test performance of FDG-PET scanning and CT scanning, the
median sensitivity and specificity of FDG-PET scans were reported as 100%
and 78%, respectively, in patients with enlarged lymph nodes.[6] FDG-PET scanning is considered very
accurate in identifying malignant nodal involvement when nodes are
enlarged. However, FDG-PET scanning will falsely identify a malignancy in
approximately one-fourth of patients with nodes that are enlarged for
other reasons, usually as a result of inflammation or infection.[15,16]
- The median sensitivity and specificity of
FDG-PET scanning in patients with normal-sized mediastinal lymph nodes
were 82% and 93%, respectively.[6] These data indicate that nearly 20% of
patients with normal-sized nodes but with malignant involvement had
falsely negative FDG-PET scan findings.
For
patients with clinically operable NSCLC, the recommendation is for a biopsy of
mediastinal lymph nodes that were found to be larger than 1 cm in shortest
transverse axis on chest CT scan or were found to be positive on FDG-PET scan.
Negative FDG-PET scanning does not preclude biopsy of radiographically enlarged
mediastinal lymph nodes. Mediastinoscopy is necessary for the detection of
cancer in mediastinal lymph nodes when the results of the CT scan and FDG-PET
scan do not corroborate each other.
Evaluation of brain metastasis
Patients at
risk for brain metastases may be staged with CT or MRI scans. One study
randomly assigned 332 patients with potentially operable NSCLC and no
neurological symptoms to brain CT or MRI imaging to detect occult brain
metastasis before lung surgery. MRI showed a trend towards a higher
preoperative detection rate than CT scan (P = .069), with an overall detection
rate of approximately 7% from pretreatment to 12 months after surgery.[17] Patients with stage I or stage II disease
had a detection rate of 4% (i.e., eight detections out of 200 patients);
however, individuals with stage III disease had a detection rate of 11.4%
(i.e., 15 detections out of 132 patients). The mean maximal diameter of the
brain metastases was significantly smaller in the MRI group. Whether the
improved detection rate of MRI translates into improved outcome remains
unknown. Not all patients are able to tolerate MRI, and for these patients
contrast-enhanced CT scan is a reasonable substitute.
Evaluation of distant metastasis other than the
brain
Numerous
nonrandomized, prospective, and retrospective studies have demonstrated that
FDG-PET scanning seems to offer diagnostic advantages over conventional imaging
in staging distant metastatic disease; however, standard FDG-PET scans have
limitations. FDG-PET scans may not extend below the pelvis and may not detect
bone metastases in the long bones of the lower extremities. Because the
metabolic tracer used in FDG-PET scanning accumulates in the brain and urinary
tract, FDG-PET scanning is not reliable for detection of metastases in these
sites.[17]
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