Comparison of endoscopic ultrasonography and multidetector computed tomography for detecting and staging pancreatic cancer
- PMID: 15545675
- DOI: 10.7326/0003-4819-141-10-200411160-00006
Comparison of endoscopic ultrasonography and multidetector computed tomography for detecting and staging pancreatic cancer
Abstract
Background: Accurate preoperative detection and staging of pancreatic cancer may identify patients with locoregional disease that is amenable to surgical resection.
Objective: To compare endoscopic ultrasonography and multidetector computed tomography (CT) for the detection, staging, and resectability of known or suspected locoregional pancreatic cancer.
Design: Prospective, observational, cohort study.
Setting: Single, tertiary referral hospital in Indianapolis, Indiana.
Patients: 120 participants with known or suspected locoregional pancreatic cancer.
Interventions: Endoscopic ultrasonography followed by multidetector CT was performed in all patients. Patients with known or suspected pancreatic cancer deemed potentially resectable by 1 or both tests were considered for surgery.
Measurements: Detection, staging, and resectability of pancreatic cancer. Surgically resected pancreatic cancer with negative microscopic histologic margins was considered resectable.
Results: Of 120 patients enrolled, 104 (87%) underwent endoscopic ultrasonography and CT. Of the 80 patients with pancreatic cancer, 27 (34%) were managed nonoperatively, and 53 (66%) treated surgically had resectable (n = 25) or unresectable (n = 28) cancer. For the 80 patients with cancer, the sensitivity of endoscopic ultrasonography (98% [95% CI, 91% to 100%]) for detecting a pancreatic mass was greater than that of CT (86% [CI, 77% to 93%]; P = 0.012). For the 53 surgical patients, endoscopic ultrasonography was superior to CT for tumor staging accuracy (67% vs. 41%; P < 0.001) but equivalent for nodal staging accuracy (44% vs. 47%; P > 0.2). Of the 25 resectable pancreatic tumors in patients recommended for surgery, endoscopic ultrasonography and CT correctly identified 88% and 92%, respectively, as resectable. Of the 28 unresectable pancreatic tumors in patients recommended for surgery, endoscopic ultrasonography and CT correctly identified 68% and 64%, respectively, as unresectable.
Limitations: Radiologists who read the scans and endosonographers were not blinded to previous radiographic information. Because of the modest sample size, CIs of the sensitivity estimates were sometimes wide.
Conclusion: Compared with multidetector CT, endoscopic ultrasonography is superior for tumor detection and staging but similar for nodal staging and resectability of preoperatively suspected nonmetastatic pancreatic cancer.
Comment in
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Computed tomography versus endoscopic ultrasonography for staging of pancreatic cancer.Ann Intern Med. 2005 Apr 5;142(7):590; author reply 590-1. doi: 10.7326/0003-4819-142-7-200504050-00019. Ann Intern Med. 2005. PMID: 15809471 No abstract available.
Summary for patients in
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Summaries for patients. Detecting pancreatic cancer and its spread.Ann Intern Med. 2004 Nov 16;141(10):I46. doi: 10.7326/0003-4819-141-10-200411160-00002. Ann Intern Med. 2004. PMID: 15545671 No abstract available.
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