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Relapsed ovarian cancer - diagnosis using 18F-FDG PET/CT; 4.

Abstract

The Guidelines Project, an initiative of the Brazilian Medical Association, aims to combine information from the medical field in order to standardize procedures to assist the reasoning and decision-making of doctors.

The information provided through this project must be assessed and criticized by the physician responsible for the conduct that will be adopted, depending on the conditions and the clinical status of each patient.


INTRODUCTION

Ovarian cancer is the eighth malignant neoplasm most often diagnosed in women in Brazil and the fifth leading cause of death from cancer in women. According to the National Institute of Cancer (INCA), in 2013, there were 3,283 deaths reported related to ovarian cancer in Brazil. There is an estimated risk of 6.15 cases per 100,000 women in Brazil in 201811. Brasil. Ministério da saúde. Registro de Câncer de Base Populacional. Web site: http://www2.inca.gov.br/wps/wcm/connect/tiposdecancer/site/home/ovario. Acesso em 19/01/2018.
http://www2.inca.gov.br/wps/wcm/connect/...
.

The majority of patients are diagnosed at an advanced stage of the disease (II-IV). The initial staging of ovarian cancer is surgical and involves laparotomy with total hysterectomy, bilateral salpingo-oophorectomy, and peritoneal and lymph node biopsies. The initial treatment usually involves cytoreductive surgery and systemic chemotherapy. Although the rate of response to the initial treatment is high, tumor recurrence is a common problem of patients treated for ovarian cancer. It is estimated that 75% of patients with ovarian cancer have relapses, usually in pelvic/retroperitoneal lymph nodes and in the peritoneum22. Prakash P et al. Role of PET/CT in Ovarian Cancer. AJR 2010;194:W464-W470.. The initial radiological evaluation of patients suspected of relapse of ovarian cancer is done with computed tomography. The exam has excellent anatomical definition, providing important information about the relationship of tumor lesions with the organs and vascular structures. However, computed tomography has limitations in the evaluation of lymph node disease, since it is based exclusively on morphological criteria, and peritoneal disease due to the difficulty of distinguishing it from nonopacified bowel loops.

The diagnosis of relapse and the anatomical location of the metastatic disease are important to determine the best therapeutic strategy. Patients who undergo cytoreductive surgery after the relapse of ovarian cancer have a better prognosis only when the volume of disease is small and when there are no extra-abdominal metastases33. Segna RA, Dottino PR, Mandeli JP, Konsker K, Cohen CJ. Secondary cytoreduction for ovarian cancer following cisplatin therapy. J Clin Oncol 1993;11:434-9..

METHODOLOGY

Using the descriptors: patients with ovarian cancer (P), positron emission tomography, computed tomography (PET-CT) with FDG (fludeoxyglucose) (I), computed tomography (C), anatomopathological and/or clinical follow-up (O); a systematic review of the literature was performed, with no time restriction, in the Medline database. A total of 515 studies were retrieved using the following search strategy: Ovarian Neoplasm OR Ovary Neoplasms OR Ovary Neoplasm OR Ovary Cancer OR Ovary Cancers OR Ovarian Cancer OR Ovarian Cancers) AND (PET OR Positron Emission Tomography) AND (FDG OR fluorodeoxyglucose OR fludeoxyglucose). Of these, 9 were selected to answer the clinical questions: What is the diagnostic accuracy of 18F-FDG PET/CT in patients with relapsed epithelial ovarian cancer? Is 18F-FDG PET/CT recommended for patients with relapsed epithelial ovarian cancer?

The risk of bias was assessed using a tool to assess the quality of studies of diagnostic accuracy (QUADAS-2). The global synthesis was elaborated considering the evidence described. Its strength was estimated (Oxford77. Levels of Evidence and Grades of Recommendations - Oxford Centre for Evidence Based Medicine. Disponível em URL: http://cebm.jr2.ox.ac.uk/docs/old_levels.Htm
http://cebm.jr2.ox.ac.uk/docs/old_levels...
/ GRADE99. Goldet G, Howick J. Understanding GRADE: an introduction. J Evid Based Med 2013; 6:50-4.) as 1b and 1c (grade A) or strong, and as 2a, 2b and 2c (grade B) or moderate, or weak, or very weak.

RESULTS

What is the diagnostic accuracy of 18F-FDG PET/CT in patients with relapsed epithelial ovarian cancer?

The main population and methodological characteristics for analyzing the quality of the studies are summarized in Table 1 (ANNEX I APPENDIX I Table 01 TABLE OF CHARACTERISTICS Author/Year Disease Population (N) Test (T) Gold Standard (P) Comparison Time interval (T→P) Tawakol 2016 Any relapse 111 PET/CT Anatomopathological or clinical follow-up Computed tomography ≥ 6 months Hynninen 2013 Peritoneal 41 PET/CT Anatomopathological Computed tomography Up to 2 weeks Signorelli 2013 Pelvic/Aortic lymph node 68 PET/CT Anatomopathological _ Not available Risum 2009 Any relapse 60 PET/CT Anatomopathological or clinical follow-up Computed tomography 3 months Sebastian 2008 Any relapse 53 PET/CT Clinical follow-up Computed tomography ≥ 4 months Mangili 2007 Any relapse 32 PET/CT Anatomopathological or clinical follow-up Computed tomography Not available Simcock 2006 Any relapse 56 PET/CT Anatomopathological or clinical follow-up _ 6 months Sironi 2004 Pelvic/Abdominal relapse 31 PET/CT Anatomopathological _ 3-11 days Bristow 2003 Relapse ≥ 1 cm 22 PET/CT Anatomopathological _ Up to 30 days T→P=time interval between the test and the gold standard (anatomopathological or clinical follow-up) / PET/CT=positron emission tomography/computed tomography Table 02 RESULTS Author/Year Sensitivity Specificity True + False + False - True - PET X Anatomopathological Tawakol 2016 0.959 0.923 93 3 4 36 Hynninen 2013 0.912 0.857 31 1 3 6 Signorelli 2013 0.833 0.982 10 1 2 55 Risum 2009 0.976 0.9 41 1 1 9 Sebastian 2008 0.974 0.8 37 3 1 12 Mangili 2007 0.897 0.667 26 1 3 2 Simcock 2006 0.868 0.667 46 1 7 2 Sironi 2004 0.529 0.857 9 2 8 12 Bristow 2003 0.833 0.75 15 1 3 3 PET x CT Tawakol 2016 0.835 0.59 81 16 16 23 Hynninen 2013 0.794 0.714 27 2 7 5 Risum 2009 0.976 0.9 41 1 1 9 Sebastian 2008 0.921 0.8 35 6 3 9 Mangili 2007 0.645 1 20 0 11 1 PET: positron emission tomography; CT: computed tomography Table 05 TABLE OF BIASES. Author/Year Patient selection Questions Risk of bias Were the patients consecutive or random? Was case-control avoided? Were unnecessary exclusions avoided? Did the selection of patients introduce a bias? Tawakol 2016 Yes Yes No ☹ Hynninen 2013 Yes Yes Yes ☺ Signorelli 2013 Yes Yes Yes ☺ Risum 2009 Yes Yes Yes ☺ Sebastian 2008 Yes Yes No ☹ Mangili 2007 Yes Yes Yes ☺ Simcock 2006 Yes Yes Yes ☺ Sironi 2004 Yes Yes Yes ☺ Bristow 2003 Yes Yes Yes ☺ Author/Year Test (PET/CT) Gold Standard Questions Risk of bias Questions Risk of bias Was the PET interpreted without the knowledge of the outcome of the gold standard? If a threshold was used, was it predetermined? Is it possible that the interpretation of the PET introduced a bias? Did the gold standard supposedly correctly classify the presence/absence of the disease? Was the gold standard conducted/ interpreted without knowledge of the PET results? Is it possible that the conduct or interpretation of the gold standard introduced a bias? Tawakol 2016 No No ☹ Yes No ☹ Hynninen 2013 Yes No ☹ Yes No ☹ Signorelli 2013 Yes No ☹ Yes Yes ☺ Risum 2009 No No ☹ Yes No ☹ Sebastian 2008 Yes No ☹ Yes No ☹ Mangili 2007 No No ☹ Yes No ☹ Simcock 2006 Yes No ☹ Yes No ☹ Sironi 2004 Yes No ☹ Yes No ☹ Bristow 2003 Yes No ☹ Yes No ☹ PET/CT = positron emission tomography/computed tomography. /. ☺= low risk; ☹= high risk PET/CT = positron emission tomography/computed tomography. /. ☺= low risk; ☹= high risk FIGURE 01 SENSITIVITY FIGURE 02 SPECIFICITY FIGURE 03 POSITIVE LIKELIHOOD RATIO FIGURE 04 NEGATIVE LIKELIHOOD RATIO FIGURE 05 ODDS RATIO FIGURE 06 18F-FDG PET/CT PERFORMANCE COMPARED TO THE REFERENCE STANDARD (COMPUTED TOMOGRAPHY) FIGURE 07 DIAGNOSTIC ACCURACY OF COMPUTED TOMOGRAPHY ). The sensitivity and specificity of 18F-FDG PET/CT and computed tomography, the prevalence of tumor relapse, as well as the number of true positives, false positives, false negatives and true negatives for each study are described in Table 2 (ANNEX I APPENDIX I Table 01 TABLE OF CHARACTERISTICS Author/Year Disease Population (N) Test (T) Gold Standard (P) Comparison Time interval (T→P) Tawakol 2016 Any relapse 111 PET/CT Anatomopathological or clinical follow-up Computed tomography ≥ 6 months Hynninen 2013 Peritoneal 41 PET/CT Anatomopathological Computed tomography Up to 2 weeks Signorelli 2013 Pelvic/Aortic lymph node 68 PET/CT Anatomopathological _ Not available Risum 2009 Any relapse 60 PET/CT Anatomopathological or clinical follow-up Computed tomography 3 months Sebastian 2008 Any relapse 53 PET/CT Clinical follow-up Computed tomography ≥ 4 months Mangili 2007 Any relapse 32 PET/CT Anatomopathological or clinical follow-up Computed tomography Not available Simcock 2006 Any relapse 56 PET/CT Anatomopathological or clinical follow-up _ 6 months Sironi 2004 Pelvic/Abdominal relapse 31 PET/CT Anatomopathological _ 3-11 days Bristow 2003 Relapse ≥ 1 cm 22 PET/CT Anatomopathological _ Up to 30 days T→P=time interval between the test and the gold standard (anatomopathological or clinical follow-up) / PET/CT=positron emission tomography/computed tomography Table 02 RESULTS Author/Year Sensitivity Specificity True + False + False - True - PET X Anatomopathological Tawakol 2016 0.959 0.923 93 3 4 36 Hynninen 2013 0.912 0.857 31 1 3 6 Signorelli 2013 0.833 0.982 10 1 2 55 Risum 2009 0.976 0.9 41 1 1 9 Sebastian 2008 0.974 0.8 37 3 1 12 Mangili 2007 0.897 0.667 26 1 3 2 Simcock 2006 0.868 0.667 46 1 7 2 Sironi 2004 0.529 0.857 9 2 8 12 Bristow 2003 0.833 0.75 15 1 3 3 PET x CT Tawakol 2016 0.835 0.59 81 16 16 23 Hynninen 2013 0.794 0.714 27 2 7 5 Risum 2009 0.976 0.9 41 1 1 9 Sebastian 2008 0.921 0.8 35 6 3 9 Mangili 2007 0.645 1 20 0 11 1 PET: positron emission tomography; CT: computed tomography Table 05 TABLE OF BIASES. Author/Year Patient selection Questions Risk of bias Were the patients consecutive or random? Was case-control avoided? Were unnecessary exclusions avoided? Did the selection of patients introduce a bias? Tawakol 2016 Yes Yes No ☹ Hynninen 2013 Yes Yes Yes ☺ Signorelli 2013 Yes Yes Yes ☺ Risum 2009 Yes Yes Yes ☺ Sebastian 2008 Yes Yes No ☹ Mangili 2007 Yes Yes Yes ☺ Simcock 2006 Yes Yes Yes ☺ Sironi 2004 Yes Yes Yes ☺ Bristow 2003 Yes Yes Yes ☺ Author/Year Test (PET/CT) Gold Standard Questions Risk of bias Questions Risk of bias Was the PET interpreted without the knowledge of the outcome of the gold standard? If a threshold was used, was it predetermined? Is it possible that the interpretation of the PET introduced a bias? Did the gold standard supposedly correctly classify the presence/absence of the disease? Was the gold standard conducted/ interpreted without knowledge of the PET results? Is it possible that the conduct or interpretation of the gold standard introduced a bias? Tawakol 2016 No No ☹ Yes No ☹ Hynninen 2013 Yes No ☹ Yes No ☹ Signorelli 2013 Yes No ☹ Yes Yes ☺ Risum 2009 No No ☹ Yes No ☹ Sebastian 2008 Yes No ☹ Yes No ☹ Mangili 2007 No No ☹ Yes No ☹ Simcock 2006 Yes No ☹ Yes No ☹ Sironi 2004 Yes No ☹ Yes No ☹ Bristow 2003 Yes No ☹ Yes No ☹ PET/CT = positron emission tomography/computed tomography. /. ☺= low risk; ☹= high risk PET/CT = positron emission tomography/computed tomography. /. ☺= low risk; ☹= high risk FIGURE 01 SENSITIVITY FIGURE 02 SPECIFICITY FIGURE 03 POSITIVE LIKELIHOOD RATIO FIGURE 04 NEGATIVE LIKELIHOOD RATIO FIGURE 05 ODDS RATIO FIGURE 06 18F-FDG PET/CT PERFORMANCE COMPARED TO THE REFERENCE STANDARD (COMPUTED TOMOGRAPHY) FIGURE 07 DIAGNOSTIC ACCURACY OF COMPUTED TOMOGRAPHY ).

Of the 474 patients included, 340 (72%) had the relapse of ovarian cancer confirmed by an anatomopathological study or clinical follow-up, while 134 (28%) showed no evidence of relapse.

Using a joint analysis of the selected studies, the characteristics of 18F-FDG PET/CT in the diagnosis of relapsed ovarian cancer were: 91% sensitivity (95% CI 87-93%) (Figure 1 - Annex I APPENDIX I Table 01 TABLE OF CHARACTERISTICS Author/Year Disease Population (N) Test (T) Gold Standard (P) Comparison Time interval (T→P) Tawakol 2016 Any relapse 111 PET/CT Anatomopathological or clinical follow-up Computed tomography ≥ 6 months Hynninen 2013 Peritoneal 41 PET/CT Anatomopathological Computed tomography Up to 2 weeks Signorelli 2013 Pelvic/Aortic lymph node 68 PET/CT Anatomopathological _ Not available Risum 2009 Any relapse 60 PET/CT Anatomopathological or clinical follow-up Computed tomography 3 months Sebastian 2008 Any relapse 53 PET/CT Clinical follow-up Computed tomography ≥ 4 months Mangili 2007 Any relapse 32 PET/CT Anatomopathological or clinical follow-up Computed tomography Not available Simcock 2006 Any relapse 56 PET/CT Anatomopathological or clinical follow-up _ 6 months Sironi 2004 Pelvic/Abdominal relapse 31 PET/CT Anatomopathological _ 3-11 days Bristow 2003 Relapse ≥ 1 cm 22 PET/CT Anatomopathological _ Up to 30 days T→P=time interval between the test and the gold standard (anatomopathological or clinical follow-up) / PET/CT=positron emission tomography/computed tomography Table 02 RESULTS Author/Year Sensitivity Specificity True + False + False - True - PET X Anatomopathological Tawakol 2016 0.959 0.923 93 3 4 36 Hynninen 2013 0.912 0.857 31 1 3 6 Signorelli 2013 0.833 0.982 10 1 2 55 Risum 2009 0.976 0.9 41 1 1 9 Sebastian 2008 0.974 0.8 37 3 1 12 Mangili 2007 0.897 0.667 26 1 3 2 Simcock 2006 0.868 0.667 46 1 7 2 Sironi 2004 0.529 0.857 9 2 8 12 Bristow 2003 0.833 0.75 15 1 3 3 PET x CT Tawakol 2016 0.835 0.59 81 16 16 23 Hynninen 2013 0.794 0.714 27 2 7 5 Risum 2009 0.976 0.9 41 1 1 9 Sebastian 2008 0.921 0.8 35 6 3 9 Mangili 2007 0.645 1 20 0 11 1 PET: positron emission tomography; CT: computed tomography Table 05 TABLE OF BIASES. Author/Year Patient selection Questions Risk of bias Were the patients consecutive or random? Was case-control avoided? Were unnecessary exclusions avoided? Did the selection of patients introduce a bias? Tawakol 2016 Yes Yes No ☹ Hynninen 2013 Yes Yes Yes ☺ Signorelli 2013 Yes Yes Yes ☺ Risum 2009 Yes Yes Yes ☺ Sebastian 2008 Yes Yes No ☹ Mangili 2007 Yes Yes Yes ☺ Simcock 2006 Yes Yes Yes ☺ Sironi 2004 Yes Yes Yes ☺ Bristow 2003 Yes Yes Yes ☺ Author/Year Test (PET/CT) Gold Standard Questions Risk of bias Questions Risk of bias Was the PET interpreted without the knowledge of the outcome of the gold standard? If a threshold was used, was it predetermined? Is it possible that the interpretation of the PET introduced a bias? Did the gold standard supposedly correctly classify the presence/absence of the disease? Was the gold standard conducted/ interpreted without knowledge of the PET results? Is it possible that the conduct or interpretation of the gold standard introduced a bias? Tawakol 2016 No No ☹ Yes No ☹ Hynninen 2013 Yes No ☹ Yes No ☹ Signorelli 2013 Yes No ☹ Yes Yes ☺ Risum 2009 No No ☹ Yes No ☹ Sebastian 2008 Yes No ☹ Yes No ☹ Mangili 2007 No No ☹ Yes No ☹ Simcock 2006 Yes No ☹ Yes No ☹ Sironi 2004 Yes No ☹ Yes No ☹ Bristow 2003 Yes No ☹ Yes No ☹ PET/CT = positron emission tomography/computed tomography. /. ☺= low risk; ☹= high risk PET/CT = positron emission tomography/computed tomography. /. ☺= low risk; ☹= high risk FIGURE 01 SENSITIVITY FIGURE 02 SPECIFICITY FIGURE 03 POSITIVE LIKELIHOOD RATIO FIGURE 04 NEGATIVE LIKELIHOOD RATIO FIGURE 05 ODDS RATIO FIGURE 06 18F-FDG PET/CT PERFORMANCE COMPARED TO THE REFERENCE STANDARD (COMPUTED TOMOGRAPHY) FIGURE 07 DIAGNOSTIC ACCURACY OF COMPUTED TOMOGRAPHY ); specificity 91% (95% CI 85-95%) (Figure 2 - Annex I APPENDIX I Table 01 TABLE OF CHARACTERISTICS Author/Year Disease Population (N) Test (T) Gold Standard (P) Comparison Time interval (T→P) Tawakol 2016 Any relapse 111 PET/CT Anatomopathological or clinical follow-up Computed tomography ≥ 6 months Hynninen 2013 Peritoneal 41 PET/CT Anatomopathological Computed tomography Up to 2 weeks Signorelli 2013 Pelvic/Aortic lymph node 68 PET/CT Anatomopathological _ Not available Risum 2009 Any relapse 60 PET/CT Anatomopathological or clinical follow-up Computed tomography 3 months Sebastian 2008 Any relapse 53 PET/CT Clinical follow-up Computed tomography ≥ 4 months Mangili 2007 Any relapse 32 PET/CT Anatomopathological or clinical follow-up Computed tomography Not available Simcock 2006 Any relapse 56 PET/CT Anatomopathological or clinical follow-up _ 6 months Sironi 2004 Pelvic/Abdominal relapse 31 PET/CT Anatomopathological _ 3-11 days Bristow 2003 Relapse ≥ 1 cm 22 PET/CT Anatomopathological _ Up to 30 days T→P=time interval between the test and the gold standard (anatomopathological or clinical follow-up) / PET/CT=positron emission tomography/computed tomography Table 02 RESULTS Author/Year Sensitivity Specificity True + False + False - True - PET X Anatomopathological Tawakol 2016 0.959 0.923 93 3 4 36 Hynninen 2013 0.912 0.857 31 1 3 6 Signorelli 2013 0.833 0.982 10 1 2 55 Risum 2009 0.976 0.9 41 1 1 9 Sebastian 2008 0.974 0.8 37 3 1 12 Mangili 2007 0.897 0.667 26 1 3 2 Simcock 2006 0.868 0.667 46 1 7 2 Sironi 2004 0.529 0.857 9 2 8 12 Bristow 2003 0.833 0.75 15 1 3 3 PET x CT Tawakol 2016 0.835 0.59 81 16 16 23 Hynninen 2013 0.794 0.714 27 2 7 5 Risum 2009 0.976 0.9 41 1 1 9 Sebastian 2008 0.921 0.8 35 6 3 9 Mangili 2007 0.645 1 20 0 11 1 PET: positron emission tomography; CT: computed tomography Table 05 TABLE OF BIASES. Author/Year Patient selection Questions Risk of bias Were the patients consecutive or random? Was case-control avoided? Were unnecessary exclusions avoided? Did the selection of patients introduce a bias? Tawakol 2016 Yes Yes No ☹ Hynninen 2013 Yes Yes Yes ☺ Signorelli 2013 Yes Yes Yes ☺ Risum 2009 Yes Yes Yes ☺ Sebastian 2008 Yes Yes No ☹ Mangili 2007 Yes Yes Yes ☺ Simcock 2006 Yes Yes Yes ☺ Sironi 2004 Yes Yes Yes ☺ Bristow 2003 Yes Yes Yes ☺ Author/Year Test (PET/CT) Gold Standard Questions Risk of bias Questions Risk of bias Was the PET interpreted without the knowledge of the outcome of the gold standard? If a threshold was used, was it predetermined? Is it possible that the interpretation of the PET introduced a bias? Did the gold standard supposedly correctly classify the presence/absence of the disease? Was the gold standard conducted/ interpreted without knowledge of the PET results? Is it possible that the conduct or interpretation of the gold standard introduced a bias? Tawakol 2016 No No ☹ Yes No ☹ Hynninen 2013 Yes No ☹ Yes No ☹ Signorelli 2013 Yes No ☹ Yes Yes ☺ Risum 2009 No No ☹ Yes No ☹ Sebastian 2008 Yes No ☹ Yes No ☹ Mangili 2007 No No ☹ Yes No ☹ Simcock 2006 Yes No ☹ Yes No ☹ Sironi 2004 Yes No ☹ Yes No ☹ Bristow 2003 Yes No ☹ Yes No ☹ PET/CT = positron emission tomography/computed tomography. /. ☺= low risk; ☹= high risk PET/CT = positron emission tomography/computed tomography. /. ☺= low risk; ☹= high risk FIGURE 01 SENSITIVITY FIGURE 02 SPECIFICITY FIGURE 03 POSITIVE LIKELIHOOD RATIO FIGURE 04 NEGATIVE LIKELIHOOD RATIO FIGURE 05 ODDS RATIO FIGURE 06 18F-FDG PET/CT PERFORMANCE COMPARED TO THE REFERENCE STANDARD (COMPUTED TOMOGRAPHY) FIGURE 07 DIAGNOSTIC ACCURACY OF COMPUTED TOMOGRAPHY ); positive likelihood ratio of 6.0 (95% CI 3.5-10.3) (Figure 3 - Annex I APPENDIX I Table 01 TABLE OF CHARACTERISTICS Author/Year Disease Population (N) Test (T) Gold Standard (P) Comparison Time interval (T→P) Tawakol 2016 Any relapse 111 PET/CT Anatomopathological or clinical follow-up Computed tomography ≥ 6 months Hynninen 2013 Peritoneal 41 PET/CT Anatomopathological Computed tomography Up to 2 weeks Signorelli 2013 Pelvic/Aortic lymph node 68 PET/CT Anatomopathological _ Not available Risum 2009 Any relapse 60 PET/CT Anatomopathological or clinical follow-up Computed tomography 3 months Sebastian 2008 Any relapse 53 PET/CT Clinical follow-up Computed tomography ≥ 4 months Mangili 2007 Any relapse 32 PET/CT Anatomopathological or clinical follow-up Computed tomography Not available Simcock 2006 Any relapse 56 PET/CT Anatomopathological or clinical follow-up _ 6 months Sironi 2004 Pelvic/Abdominal relapse 31 PET/CT Anatomopathological _ 3-11 days Bristow 2003 Relapse ≥ 1 cm 22 PET/CT Anatomopathological _ Up to 30 days T→P=time interval between the test and the gold standard (anatomopathological or clinical follow-up) / PET/CT=positron emission tomography/computed tomography Table 02 RESULTS Author/Year Sensitivity Specificity True + False + False - True - PET X Anatomopathological Tawakol 2016 0.959 0.923 93 3 4 36 Hynninen 2013 0.912 0.857 31 1 3 6 Signorelli 2013 0.833 0.982 10 1 2 55 Risum 2009 0.976 0.9 41 1 1 9 Sebastian 2008 0.974 0.8 37 3 1 12 Mangili 2007 0.897 0.667 26 1 3 2 Simcock 2006 0.868 0.667 46 1 7 2 Sironi 2004 0.529 0.857 9 2 8 12 Bristow 2003 0.833 0.75 15 1 3 3 PET x CT Tawakol 2016 0.835 0.59 81 16 16 23 Hynninen 2013 0.794 0.714 27 2 7 5 Risum 2009 0.976 0.9 41 1 1 9 Sebastian 2008 0.921 0.8 35 6 3 9 Mangili 2007 0.645 1 20 0 11 1 PET: positron emission tomography; CT: computed tomography Table 05 TABLE OF BIASES. Author/Year Patient selection Questions Risk of bias Were the patients consecutive or random? Was case-control avoided? Were unnecessary exclusions avoided? Did the selection of patients introduce a bias? Tawakol 2016 Yes Yes No ☹ Hynninen 2013 Yes Yes Yes ☺ Signorelli 2013 Yes Yes Yes ☺ Risum 2009 Yes Yes Yes ☺ Sebastian 2008 Yes Yes No ☹ Mangili 2007 Yes Yes Yes ☺ Simcock 2006 Yes Yes Yes ☺ Sironi 2004 Yes Yes Yes ☺ Bristow 2003 Yes Yes Yes ☺ Author/Year Test (PET/CT) Gold Standard Questions Risk of bias Questions Risk of bias Was the PET interpreted without the knowledge of the outcome of the gold standard? If a threshold was used, was it predetermined? Is it possible that the interpretation of the PET introduced a bias? Did the gold standard supposedly correctly classify the presence/absence of the disease? Was the gold standard conducted/ interpreted without knowledge of the PET results? Is it possible that the conduct or interpretation of the gold standard introduced a bias? Tawakol 2016 No No ☹ Yes No ☹ Hynninen 2013 Yes No ☹ Yes No ☹ Signorelli 2013 Yes No ☹ Yes Yes ☺ Risum 2009 No No ☹ Yes No ☹ Sebastian 2008 Yes No ☹ Yes No ☹ Mangili 2007 No No ☹ Yes No ☹ Simcock 2006 Yes No ☹ Yes No ☹ Sironi 2004 Yes No ☹ Yes No ☹ Bristow 2003 Yes No ☹ Yes No ☹ PET/CT = positron emission tomography/computed tomography. /. ☺= low risk; ☹= high risk PET/CT = positron emission tomography/computed tomography. /. ☺= low risk; ☹= high risk FIGURE 01 SENSITIVITY FIGURE 02 SPECIFICITY FIGURE 03 POSITIVE LIKELIHOOD RATIO FIGURE 04 NEGATIVE LIKELIHOOD RATIO FIGURE 05 ODDS RATIO FIGURE 06 18F-FDG PET/CT PERFORMANCE COMPARED TO THE REFERENCE STANDARD (COMPUTED TOMOGRAPHY) FIGURE 07 DIAGNOSTIC ACCURACY OF COMPUTED TOMOGRAPHY ); negative likelihood ratio of 0.1 (95% CI 0.05-0.29) (Figure 4 - Annex I APPENDIX I Table 01 TABLE OF CHARACTERISTICS Author/Year Disease Population (N) Test (T) Gold Standard (P) Comparison Time interval (T→P) Tawakol 2016 Any relapse 111 PET/CT Anatomopathological or clinical follow-up Computed tomography ≥ 6 months Hynninen 2013 Peritoneal 41 PET/CT Anatomopathological Computed tomography Up to 2 weeks Signorelli 2013 Pelvic/Aortic lymph node 68 PET/CT Anatomopathological _ Not available Risum 2009 Any relapse 60 PET/CT Anatomopathological or clinical follow-up Computed tomography 3 months Sebastian 2008 Any relapse 53 PET/CT Clinical follow-up Computed tomography ≥ 4 months Mangili 2007 Any relapse 32 PET/CT Anatomopathological or clinical follow-up Computed tomography Not available Simcock 2006 Any relapse 56 PET/CT Anatomopathological or clinical follow-up _ 6 months Sironi 2004 Pelvic/Abdominal relapse 31 PET/CT Anatomopathological _ 3-11 days Bristow 2003 Relapse ≥ 1 cm 22 PET/CT Anatomopathological _ Up to 30 days T→P=time interval between the test and the gold standard (anatomopathological or clinical follow-up) / PET/CT=positron emission tomography/computed tomography Table 02 RESULTS Author/Year Sensitivity Specificity True + False + False - True - PET X Anatomopathological Tawakol 2016 0.959 0.923 93 3 4 36 Hynninen 2013 0.912 0.857 31 1 3 6 Signorelli 2013 0.833 0.982 10 1 2 55 Risum 2009 0.976 0.9 41 1 1 9 Sebastian 2008 0.974 0.8 37 3 1 12 Mangili 2007 0.897 0.667 26 1 3 2 Simcock 2006 0.868 0.667 46 1 7 2 Sironi 2004 0.529 0.857 9 2 8 12 Bristow 2003 0.833 0.75 15 1 3 3 PET x CT Tawakol 2016 0.835 0.59 81 16 16 23 Hynninen 2013 0.794 0.714 27 2 7 5 Risum 2009 0.976 0.9 41 1 1 9 Sebastian 2008 0.921 0.8 35 6 3 9 Mangili 2007 0.645 1 20 0 11 1 PET: positron emission tomography; CT: computed tomography Table 05 TABLE OF BIASES. Author/Year Patient selection Questions Risk of bias Were the patients consecutive or random? Was case-control avoided? Were unnecessary exclusions avoided? Did the selection of patients introduce a bias? Tawakol 2016 Yes Yes No ☹ Hynninen 2013 Yes Yes Yes ☺ Signorelli 2013 Yes Yes Yes ☺ Risum 2009 Yes Yes Yes ☺ Sebastian 2008 Yes Yes No ☹ Mangili 2007 Yes Yes Yes ☺ Simcock 2006 Yes Yes Yes ☺ Sironi 2004 Yes Yes Yes ☺ Bristow 2003 Yes Yes Yes ☺ Author/Year Test (PET/CT) Gold Standard Questions Risk of bias Questions Risk of bias Was the PET interpreted without the knowledge of the outcome of the gold standard? If a threshold was used, was it predetermined? Is it possible that the interpretation of the PET introduced a bias? Did the gold standard supposedly correctly classify the presence/absence of the disease? Was the gold standard conducted/ interpreted without knowledge of the PET results? Is it possible that the conduct or interpretation of the gold standard introduced a bias? Tawakol 2016 No No ☹ Yes No ☹ Hynninen 2013 Yes No ☹ Yes No ☹ Signorelli 2013 Yes No ☹ Yes Yes ☺ Risum 2009 No No ☹ Yes No ☹ Sebastian 2008 Yes No ☹ Yes No ☹ Mangili 2007 No No ☹ Yes No ☹ Simcock 2006 Yes No ☹ Yes No ☹ Sironi 2004 Yes No ☹ Yes No ☹ Bristow 2003 Yes No ☹ Yes No ☹ PET/CT = positron emission tomography/computed tomography. /. ☺= low risk; ☹= high risk PET/CT = positron emission tomography/computed tomography. /. ☺= low risk; ☹= high risk FIGURE 01 SENSITIVITY FIGURE 02 SPECIFICITY FIGURE 03 POSITIVE LIKELIHOOD RATIO FIGURE 04 NEGATIVE LIKELIHOOD RATIO FIGURE 05 ODDS RATIO FIGURE 06 18F-FDG PET/CT PERFORMANCE COMPARED TO THE REFERENCE STANDARD (COMPUTED TOMOGRAPHY) FIGURE 07 DIAGNOSTIC ACCURACY OF COMPUTED TOMOGRAPHY ); and odds ratio of 56.5 (95% CI 18.8-169.3) (Figure 5 - Annex I APPENDIX I Table 01 TABLE OF CHARACTERISTICS Author/Year Disease Population (N) Test (T) Gold Standard (P) Comparison Time interval (T→P) Tawakol 2016 Any relapse 111 PET/CT Anatomopathological or clinical follow-up Computed tomography ≥ 6 months Hynninen 2013 Peritoneal 41 PET/CT Anatomopathological Computed tomography Up to 2 weeks Signorelli 2013 Pelvic/Aortic lymph node 68 PET/CT Anatomopathological _ Not available Risum 2009 Any relapse 60 PET/CT Anatomopathological or clinical follow-up Computed tomography 3 months Sebastian 2008 Any relapse 53 PET/CT Clinical follow-up Computed tomography ≥ 4 months Mangili 2007 Any relapse 32 PET/CT Anatomopathological or clinical follow-up Computed tomography Not available Simcock 2006 Any relapse 56 PET/CT Anatomopathological or clinical follow-up _ 6 months Sironi 2004 Pelvic/Abdominal relapse 31 PET/CT Anatomopathological _ 3-11 days Bristow 2003 Relapse ≥ 1 cm 22 PET/CT Anatomopathological _ Up to 30 days T→P=time interval between the test and the gold standard (anatomopathological or clinical follow-up) / PET/CT=positron emission tomography/computed tomography Table 02 RESULTS Author/Year Sensitivity Specificity True + False + False - True - PET X Anatomopathological Tawakol 2016 0.959 0.923 93 3 4 36 Hynninen 2013 0.912 0.857 31 1 3 6 Signorelli 2013 0.833 0.982 10 1 2 55 Risum 2009 0.976 0.9 41 1 1 9 Sebastian 2008 0.974 0.8 37 3 1 12 Mangili 2007 0.897 0.667 26 1 3 2 Simcock 2006 0.868 0.667 46 1 7 2 Sironi 2004 0.529 0.857 9 2 8 12 Bristow 2003 0.833 0.75 15 1 3 3 PET x CT Tawakol 2016 0.835 0.59 81 16 16 23 Hynninen 2013 0.794 0.714 27 2 7 5 Risum 2009 0.976 0.9 41 1 1 9 Sebastian 2008 0.921 0.8 35 6 3 9 Mangili 2007 0.645 1 20 0 11 1 PET: positron emission tomography; CT: computed tomography Table 05 TABLE OF BIASES. Author/Year Patient selection Questions Risk of bias Were the patients consecutive or random? Was case-control avoided? Were unnecessary exclusions avoided? Did the selection of patients introduce a bias? Tawakol 2016 Yes Yes No ☹ Hynninen 2013 Yes Yes Yes ☺ Signorelli 2013 Yes Yes Yes ☺ Risum 2009 Yes Yes Yes ☺ Sebastian 2008 Yes Yes No ☹ Mangili 2007 Yes Yes Yes ☺ Simcock 2006 Yes Yes Yes ☺ Sironi 2004 Yes Yes Yes ☺ Bristow 2003 Yes Yes Yes ☺ Author/Year Test (PET/CT) Gold Standard Questions Risk of bias Questions Risk of bias Was the PET interpreted without the knowledge of the outcome of the gold standard? If a threshold was used, was it predetermined? Is it possible that the interpretation of the PET introduced a bias? Did the gold standard supposedly correctly classify the presence/absence of the disease? Was the gold standard conducted/ interpreted without knowledge of the PET results? Is it possible that the conduct or interpretation of the gold standard introduced a bias? Tawakol 2016 No No ☹ Yes No ☹ Hynninen 2013 Yes No ☹ Yes No ☹ Signorelli 2013 Yes No ☹ Yes Yes ☺ Risum 2009 No No ☹ Yes No ☹ Sebastian 2008 Yes No ☹ Yes No ☹ Mangili 2007 No No ☹ Yes No ☹ Simcock 2006 Yes No ☹ Yes No ☹ Sironi 2004 Yes No ☹ Yes No ☹ Bristow 2003 Yes No ☹ Yes No ☹ PET/CT = positron emission tomography/computed tomography. /. ☺= low risk; ☹= high risk PET/CT = positron emission tomography/computed tomography. /. ☺= low risk; ☹= high risk FIGURE 01 SENSITIVITY FIGURE 02 SPECIFICITY FIGURE 03 POSITIVE LIKELIHOOD RATIO FIGURE 04 NEGATIVE LIKELIHOOD RATIO FIGURE 05 ODDS RATIO FIGURE 06 18F-FDG PET/CT PERFORMANCE COMPARED TO THE REFERENCE STANDARD (COMPUTED TOMOGRAPHY) FIGURE 07 DIAGNOSTIC ACCURACY OF COMPUTED TOMOGRAPHY ).

Figure 6 (annex I APPENDIX I Table 01 TABLE OF CHARACTERISTICS Author/Year Disease Population (N) Test (T) Gold Standard (P) Comparison Time interval (T→P) Tawakol 2016 Any relapse 111 PET/CT Anatomopathological or clinical follow-up Computed tomography ≥ 6 months Hynninen 2013 Peritoneal 41 PET/CT Anatomopathological Computed tomography Up to 2 weeks Signorelli 2013 Pelvic/Aortic lymph node 68 PET/CT Anatomopathological _ Not available Risum 2009 Any relapse 60 PET/CT Anatomopathological or clinical follow-up Computed tomography 3 months Sebastian 2008 Any relapse 53 PET/CT Clinical follow-up Computed tomography ≥ 4 months Mangili 2007 Any relapse 32 PET/CT Anatomopathological or clinical follow-up Computed tomography Not available Simcock 2006 Any relapse 56 PET/CT Anatomopathological or clinical follow-up _ 6 months Sironi 2004 Pelvic/Abdominal relapse 31 PET/CT Anatomopathological _ 3-11 days Bristow 2003 Relapse ≥ 1 cm 22 PET/CT Anatomopathological _ Up to 30 days T→P=time interval between the test and the gold standard (anatomopathological or clinical follow-up) / PET/CT=positron emission tomography/computed tomography Table 02 RESULTS Author/Year Sensitivity Specificity True + False + False - True - PET X Anatomopathological Tawakol 2016 0.959 0.923 93 3 4 36 Hynninen 2013 0.912 0.857 31 1 3 6 Signorelli 2013 0.833 0.982 10 1 2 55 Risum 2009 0.976 0.9 41 1 1 9 Sebastian 2008 0.974 0.8 37 3 1 12 Mangili 2007 0.897 0.667 26 1 3 2 Simcock 2006 0.868 0.667 46 1 7 2 Sironi 2004 0.529 0.857 9 2 8 12 Bristow 2003 0.833 0.75 15 1 3 3 PET x CT Tawakol 2016 0.835 0.59 81 16 16 23 Hynninen 2013 0.794 0.714 27 2 7 5 Risum 2009 0.976 0.9 41 1 1 9 Sebastian 2008 0.921 0.8 35 6 3 9 Mangili 2007 0.645 1 20 0 11 1 PET: positron emission tomography; CT: computed tomography Table 05 TABLE OF BIASES. Author/Year Patient selection Questions Risk of bias Were the patients consecutive or random? Was case-control avoided? Were unnecessary exclusions avoided? Did the selection of patients introduce a bias? Tawakol 2016 Yes Yes No ☹ Hynninen 2013 Yes Yes Yes ☺ Signorelli 2013 Yes Yes Yes ☺ Risum 2009 Yes Yes Yes ☺ Sebastian 2008 Yes Yes No ☹ Mangili 2007 Yes Yes Yes ☺ Simcock 2006 Yes Yes Yes ☺ Sironi 2004 Yes Yes Yes ☺ Bristow 2003 Yes Yes Yes ☺ Author/Year Test (PET/CT) Gold Standard Questions Risk of bias Questions Risk of bias Was the PET interpreted without the knowledge of the outcome of the gold standard? If a threshold was used, was it predetermined? Is it possible that the interpretation of the PET introduced a bias? Did the gold standard supposedly correctly classify the presence/absence of the disease? Was the gold standard conducted/ interpreted without knowledge of the PET results? Is it possible that the conduct or interpretation of the gold standard introduced a bias? Tawakol 2016 No No ☹ Yes No ☹ Hynninen 2013 Yes No ☹ Yes No ☹ Signorelli 2013 Yes No ☹ Yes Yes ☺ Risum 2009 No No ☹ Yes No ☹ Sebastian 2008 Yes No ☹ Yes No ☹ Mangili 2007 No No ☹ Yes No ☹ Simcock 2006 Yes No ☹ Yes No ☹ Sironi 2004 Yes No ☹ Yes No ☹ Bristow 2003 Yes No ☹ Yes No ☹ PET/CT = positron emission tomography/computed tomography. /. ☺= low risk; ☹= high risk PET/CT = positron emission tomography/computed tomography. /. ☺= low risk; ☹= high risk FIGURE 01 SENSITIVITY FIGURE 02 SPECIFICITY FIGURE 03 POSITIVE LIKELIHOOD RATIO FIGURE 04 NEGATIVE LIKELIHOOD RATIO FIGURE 05 ODDS RATIO FIGURE 06 18F-FDG PET/CT PERFORMANCE COMPARED TO THE REFERENCE STANDARD (COMPUTED TOMOGRAPHY) FIGURE 07 DIAGNOSTIC ACCURACY OF COMPUTED TOMOGRAPHY ) corresponds to the 18F-FDG PET/CT performance compared to the reference standard (anatomopathological) in the diagnosis of relapsed ovarian cancer. In the figure, 3 curves can be observed, of which only the central corresponds to the SROC curve (summary receiver-operating characteristic), while the others correspond to the CI of 95%. The area below the curve [area under the curve (AUC)] totals 0.94 (SE=0.02), indicating that, in a random sample, the diagnostic test has the capacity to distinguish the majority of individuals considered cases and non-cases. In this analysis, we identified that the highest common value between sensitivity and specificity (Q* index) was 0.88 (SE=0.03).

Is 18F-FDG PET/CT recommended for patients with relapsed epithelial ovarian cancer?

There is no direct evidence of reduction of clinical events with the use of 18F-FDG PET/CT in patients with relapsed ovarian cancer. In the absence of direct evidence of the effectiveness of the method, we compared the diagnostic accuracy with conventional imaging (computed tomography) and analyzed the change in clinical management determined by the use of PET/CT in patients with suspected relapsed ovarian cancer.

The joint analysis of the selected studies suggests that 18F-FDG PET/CT is more sensitive and more specific than computed tomography for relapsed ovarian cancer: sensitivity 91% (95% CI 87-93%) vs. 84% (95% CI 79-89%) (p<0.001) and specificity 91% (95% CI 85-95%) vs. 65% (95% CI 53-76%) (p<0.001). The SROC curves (Figures 6 and 7 - Annex II) illustrate a significantly greater diagnostic accuracy of 18F-FDG PET/CT (AUC=0.94; SE=0.02) compared to computed tomography (AUC=0.84; SE=0.03).

Fulham et al44. Fulham MJ, Carter J, Baldey A, Hicks RJ, Ramshaw JE, Gibson M. The impact of PET-CT in suspected recurrent ovarian câncer: A prospective multi-centre study as part of the Australian PET Data Collection Project. Gynecol Oncol 2009;112:462-8. included 90 patients with suspected relapsed epithelial ovarian cancer in a Australian prospective and multicenter study with a follow-up of 12 months. 18F-FDG PET/CT was superior to computed tomography in detecting lymph node, peritoneal and subcapsular hepatic metastases. The use of PET/CT changed management in 59% (95% CI 49-69%) of patients. Of patients who were candidates for surgery before the PET/CT, 54% (95% CI 37-70%) avoided it; chemotherapy was added to the treatment of 16% (95% CI 9-24%) and avoided in 13% (95% CI 8-22%).

Hillner et al55. Hillner BE, Siegel BA, Shields AF, et al. Relationship Between Cancer Type and Impact of PET and PET/CT on Intended Management: Findings of the National Oncologic PET Registry. J Nucl Med 2008;49:1928-35. evaluated the rate of change of therapy in patients who underwent 18F-FDG PET/CT for suspected relapsed ovarian cancer in the NOPR (National Oncology PET Registry). Of the 2,160 PET/CT examinations included, there was a change in the intention-to-treat in 44% of cases (95% CI 42-47%).

The Fulham et al44. Fulham MJ, Carter J, Baldey A, Hicks RJ, Ramshaw JE, Gibson M. The impact of PET-CT in suspected recurrent ovarian câncer: A prospective multi-centre study as part of the Australian PET Data Collection Project. Gynecol Oncol 2009;112:462-8. and Hillner et al55. Hillner BE, Siegel BA, Shields AF, et al. Relationship Between Cancer Type and Impact of PET and PET/CT on Intended Management: Findings of the National Oncologic PET Registry. J Nucl Med 2008;49:1928-35. studies suggest that 18F-FDG PET/CT changes the clinical management of a significant proportion of patients due to increased sensitivity, mainly due to the contraindication of cytoreductive surgery. The detection of extra-abdominal metastases or sites of diseases anatomically inaccessible avoids the morbidity and mortality associated with the invasive procedure. Although there is no evidence in the literature of an improvement in the quality of life of patients who have cytoreductive surgery replaced by other treatments, there is a consensus among physicians that the potential benefits of surgery do not outweigh the risks in patients with disseminated disease.

The majority of ovarian cancer patients present with high serum levels of the tumor marker CA-125. CA-125 has a high sensitivity in the detection of ovarian cancer recurrence. Its plasma concentration generally increases months before the disease manifests itself clinically. It is not uncommon to find patients with high CA-125 levels and normal computed tomography. In this scenario, the use of 18F-FDG PET/CT can be considered due to its greater sensitivity as compared to computed tomography.

A multicenter clinical study66. Rustin GJS, van der Burg MEL, Griffin CL, et al. Early versus delayed treatment of relapsed ovarian cancer (MRC OV05/EORTC 55955): a randomised trial. Lancet 2010; 376:1155-63. randomized 529 patients to start chemotherapy based on increased CA-125 levels only (group that started the treatment early) or on clinical/symptomatic relapse (group that started the treatment late). After a median follow-up of 57 months, there was no difference in overall survival between the groups [HR 0.98 (95% CI 0.8-1.2)], which puts into question whether it is useful to have an early confirmation of tumor relapse by imaging (computed tomography or 18F-FDG PET/CT) in patients who are not candidates for cytoreductive surgery. New systemic therapies for ovarian cancer have been developed over the last decade, such as PARP inhibitors (poly ADP-ribose polymerase) and angiogenesis inhibitors. However, it is still unkown whether early start of systemic therapies can reduce clinical events in patients with recurrent ovarian cancer.

RECOMMENDATION

The meta-analysis of studies selected shows good diagnostic accuracy of 18F-FDG PET/CT for detecting relapsed ovarian cancer with high sensitivity. We recommend the use of 18F-FDG PET/CT in patients with relapsed ovarian cancer when the findings of computed tomography do not contraindicate cytoreductive surgery (grade of recommendation and strength of the evidence B). The presence of multifocal disease or extra-abdominal metastasis on 18F-FDG PET/CT, a frequent finding, can avoid surgery and reduce the morbidity and mortality associated with the invasive procedure. Confirmation of exclusively intra-abdominal disease by 18F-FDG PET/CT supports the recommendation of cytoreductive surgery.

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APPENDIX I

Table 01
TABLE OF CHARACTERISTICS
Table 02
RESULTS

Table 05
TABLE OF BIASES.
FIGURE 01
SENSITIVITY
FIGURE 02
SPECIFICITY
FIGURE 03
POSITIVE LIKELIHOOD RATIO
FIGURE 04
NEGATIVE LIKELIHOOD RATIO
FIGURE 05
ODDS RATIO
FIGURE 06
18F-FDG PET/CT PERFORMANCE COMPARED TO THE REFERENCE STANDARD (COMPUTED TOMOGRAPHY)
FIGURE 07
DIAGNOSTIC ACCURACY OF COMPUTED TOMOGRAPHY

Publication Dates

  • Publication in this collection
    02 May 2019
  • Date of issue
    2019

History

  • Accepted
    14 Aug 2018
Associação Médica Brasileira R. São Carlos do Pinhal, 324, 01333-903 São Paulo SP - Brazil, Tel: +55 11 3178-6800, Fax: +55 11 3178-6816 - São Paulo - SP - Brazil
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