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Accuracy and prognostic impact of FDG PET/CT and biopsy in bone marrow assessment of follicular lymphoma at diagnosis: A Nation‐Wide cohort study

Authors :
Isabel Ródenas‐Quiñonero
Tzu Chen‐Liang
Taida Martín‐Santos
Antonio Salar
Marta Fernández‐González
Carolina Celades
José‐Tomás Navarro
Ana Belén Martínez‐Garcia
Rafael Andreu
Aitana Balaguer
Alejandro Martin García‐Sancho
Mónica Baile
Javier López‐Jiménez
Juan Marquet‐Palomanes
Ana Isabel Teruel
María José Terol
Carmen Benet
Laura Frutos
José Luis Navarro
Jon Uña
Marina Suarez
Montserrat Cortes
José Contreras
Cristina Ruiz
Pilar Tamayo
Jorge Mucientes
Pablo Sopena‐Novales
Laura Reguilón‐Gallego
José Javier Sánchez‐Blanco
Elena Pérez‐Ceballos
Andrés Jerez
Francisco José Ortuño
Source :
Cancer Medicine, Vol 12, Iss 6, Pp 6536-6546 (2023)
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
Wiley, 2023.

Abstract

Abstract Backgound In the workup of follicular lymphoma (FL), bone marrow biopsy (BMB) assessment is a key component of FLIPI and FLIPI2, the most widely used outcome scores. During the previous decade, several studies explored the role of FDG‐PET/CT for detecting nodal and extranodal disease, with only one large study comparing both techniques. Methods The aim of our study was to evaluate the diagnostic accuracy and the prognostic impact of both procedures in a retrospective cohort of 299 FL patients with both tests performed at diagnosis. In order to avoid a collinearity bias, FLIPI2 was deconstructed in its founding parameters, and the bone marrow involvement (BMI) parameter separately included as: a positive BMB, a positive PET/CT, the combined “PET/CT and BMB positive” or “PET/CT or BMB positive”. These variables were also confronted independently with the POD24 in 233 patients treated with intensive regimens. Results In the total cohort, bone marrow was involved in 124 and 60 patients by BMB and PET/CT, respectively. In terms of overall survival, age > 60 y.o. and the combined “PET/CT or BMB positive” achieved statistical independence as a prognostic factor. In patients treated with an intensive regimen, only the combined “PET/CT or BMB positive” added prognostic value for a shorter overall survival, when confronted with the POD24. Conclusion Our results show that in FL both BMB and PET/CT should be considered at diagnosis, as their combined assessment provides independent prognostic value in the context of the most widely use clinical scores.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20457634
Volume :
12
Issue :
6
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Cancer Medicine
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.45436750f28f45ad89c3293aff660252
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1002/cam4.5424