Diagnostics (Nov 2020)

Higher Interrater Agreement of FDG-PET/CT than Bone Scintigraphy in Diagnosing Bone Recurrent Breast Cancer

  • Jorun Holm,
  • Ziba Ahangarani Farahani,
  • Oke Gerke,
  • Christina Baun,
  • Kirsten Falch,
  • Malene Grubbe Hildebrandt

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/diagnostics10121021
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 12
p. 1021

Abstract

Read online

The purpose was to investigate the interrater agreement of FDG-PET/CT and bone scintigraphy for diagnosing bone recurrence in breast cancer patients. A total of 100 women with suspected recurrence of breast cancer underwent planar whole-body bone scintigraphy with [99mTc]DPD and FDG-PET/CT. Scans were evaluated independently by experienced nuclear medicine physicians and the results for one modality were blinded to the other. Images were visually interpreted using a 4-point assessment scale (0 = no metastases, 1 = probably no metastases, 2 = probably metastases, 3 = definite metastases). Out of 100 women, 22 (22%) were verified with distant recurrence, 18 of these had bone involvement. The proportions of agreement between readers were 93% (86.3–96.6) for bone recurrence with FDG-PET/CT and 47% (37.5–56.7) for bone recurrence with planar bone scintigraphy. The strengths of agreement between readers for diagnosing bone recurrence was ‘almost perfect’ with FDG-PET/CT and was ‘fair’ with planar bone scintigraphy according to Cohen’s kappa value of 0.82 (0.70–0.95) and 0.28 (0.18–0.39), respectively. Interrater agreement yielded improved reproducibility with FDG-PET/CT versus with bone scintigraphy when diagnosing recurrence with bone metastasis in this patient cohort.

Keywords