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Diagnostic accuracy of diffusion‐weighted imaging‐ magnetic resonance imaging compared to positron emission tomography/computed tomography in evaluating and assessing pathological response to treatment in adult patients with lymphoma: A systematic review
Author(s) -
Fitzpatrick John J,
Ryan Miriam A,
Bruzzi John F
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
journal of medical imaging and radiation oncology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.31
H-Index - 43
eISSN - 1754-9485
pISSN - 1754-9477
DOI - 10.1111/1754-9485.12723
Subject(s) - medicine , positron emission tomography , magnetic resonance imaging , nuclear medicine , radiology , effective diffusion coefficient , lymphoma , cohen's kappa , medical physics , pathology , machine learning , computer science
Summary The use of Positron emission tomography/computerised tomography ( PET / CT ) is well established in the staging and assessment of treatment response of lymphoma. Recent studies have suggested that whole body diffusion‐weighted imaging –magnetic resonance imaging ( WB ‐ DW ‐ MRI ) may be an alternative to PET / CT in both staging and assessment of treatment response. A systematic review was performed to assess the ability of DW ‐ MRI in the assessment of treatment response in lymphoma. Pubmed, Medline, Web of Science and Embase databases were queried for studies examining whole body DW ‐ MRI compared to PET / CT in adult patients using a protocol of search terms. We carried out an extensive assessment of titles, abstracts and full texts of relevant paper as well as quality assessment with the Quality Assessment of Diagnostic Accuracy ( QUADAS ‐2) tool. Eight studies were found to meet the criteria and were included in our review and analysis. Overall, the quality of studies was found to be moderate, with good inter‐rater agreement ( K  = 0.74). Data analysis showed that lesion‐based assessment in 5 studies with pooled results had a sensitivity and specificity of 94.7% and 99.3%. Assessment with Cohen's Kappa coefficient showed agreement to be excellent ( K  = 0.88). Three studies were included for qualitative analysis, two of which showed good equivalence between PET / CT and DW ‐ MRI . WB ‐ DWI ‐ MRI can be considered a sensitive and specific method for assessing treatment response in Lymphoma without the use of ionising radiation or administration of F‐18 Flurodeoxyglucose. Further studies are needed to evaluate the optimum b ‐values in assessing treatment response.

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