R. Boni et al., STAGING OF METASTATIC MELANOMA BY WHOLE-BODY POSITRON EMISSION TOMOGRAPHY USING 2-FLUORINE-18-FLUORO-2-DEOXY-D-GLUCOSE, British journal of dermatology, 132(4), 1995, pp. 556-562
Metastatic melanoma was staged in 15 patients using whole-body positro
n emission tomography (PET) and the radiopharmaceutical 2-fluorine-18-
fluoro-2-deoxy-D-glucose (FDG). PET correctly demonstrated 30 metastas
es in lung, brain, pancreas, nasal cavity, skin and subcutaneous tissu
e, and lymph nodes. It detected 97% of all metastases exceeding its sp
atial resolution (>5 mm). Two cutaneous metastases (approximately 3 mm
) did not show increased FDG uptake; the overall detection sensitivity
was 91%. Two false-positive lesions in one patient were due to severe
wound infection. PET correctly excluded malignancy in four cases wher
e suspicious lesions were found with conventional cross-sectional imag
ing modalities but later ruled out by fine-needle biopsy. PET therefor
e proved to be an excellent method for staging of metastatic melanoma.
Due to its high sensitivity for malignant lesions and the possibility
of covering the whole body in one examination, it can replace staging
techniques employing multiple imaging modalities: chest X-ray, ultras
onography and computed tomography. Furthermore, it provides informatio
n on the malignant potential of the detected lesion.