Publication | Open Access
Lymphomatous involvement of gastrointestinal tract: Evaluation by positron emission tomography with<sup>18</sup>F-fluorodeoxyglucose
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References
2005
Year
Twenty-five patients had a high-grade lymphoma and eight had a low-grade lymphoma. The stomach was the most common site of the involvement (20 patients). In high-grade lymphoma, PET showed focal nodular or diffuse hypermetabolic activity. The average SUV(max)+/-SD was 11.58+/-5.83. After the therapy, the patients whose biopsies showed no evidence of lymphoma had a lower uptake without focal lesions. The SUV(max)+/-SD decreased from 11.58+/-5.83 to 2.21+/-0.78. In patients whose post-treatment biopsies showed lymphoma, the SUV(max)+/-SD was 9.42+/-6.27. Low-grade follicular lymphomas of the colon and stomach showed diffuse hypermetabolic activity in the bowel wall (SUV(max) 8.2 and 10.3, respectively). The SUV(max) was 2.02-3.8 (mean 3.02) in the stomach lesions of patients with MALT lymphoma. ONCLUSION: (18)F-FDG PET contributes to the diagnosis of high-grade gastrointestinal non-Hodgkin's lymphoma, even when there is the normal background FDG activity. Furthermore, the SUV plays a role in evaluating treatment response. Low-grade NHL demonstrates FDG uptake but at a lesser intensity than seen in high-grade NHL.
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