Journal of Clinical Medicine (Jun 2021)

Characteristics and Clinical Value of 18F-FDG PET/CT in the Management of Adult-Onset Still’s Disease: 35 Cases

  • Josselin Brisset,
  • Yvan Jamilloux,
  • Stephanie Dumonteil,
  • Guillaume Lades,
  • Martin Killian,
  • Mathieu Gerfaud-Valentin,
  • Anne Lemaire,
  • Tomasz Chroboczek,
  • Eric Liozon,
  • Guillaume Gondran,
  • Pascal Sève,
  • Jacques Monteil,
  • Anne-Laure Fauchais,
  • Kim Heang Ly

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm10112489
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 11
p. 2489

Abstract

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While the diagnosis of adult-onset Still’s disease (AOSD) involves the exclusion of differential diagnoses, the characteristics and value of 18F-Fluorodeoxyglucose (18F-FDG) Positron Emission Tomography coupled with CT (PET/CT) in the management of AOSD remain poorly known. Our retrospective study included patients from four centers, fulfilling Yamaguchi or Fautrel criteria, who underwent a PET/CT during an active AOSD. Thirty-five patients were included. At the time of PET/CT, the Yamaguchi criteria were met in 23 of 29 evaluable cases. PET/CT showed bone marrow (74.3%), lymph node (74.3%), and splenic (48.6%) FDG uptake. Despite arthralgia or arthritis in most patients, joints were rarely the sites of 18F-FDG accumulation. The spatial distribution of 18F-FDG uptake was nonspecific, and its intensity could be similar to malignant disease. Lymph node or bone marrow biopsy was performed after PET/CT in 20 patients (57.1%). The intensity of bone marrow; splenic and lymph node hypermetabolism appeared to be correlated with disease activity. Abnormal PET/CT in the cervical lymph nodes and age ≥ 60 years seemed to be predictive factors for monocyclic evolution. The clinical value of PET/CT is not in direct diagnosis; but as an aid in excluding differential diagnoses by searching for their scintigraphic features and guiding biopsy.

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