• Newly Diagnosed Lymphoma: Initial Results With Whole-Body TI -Weighted, STIR, and Diffusion-Weighted MRI Compared With I8F-FDG PET/CT

    AJR:196, March 2011

    Henriette M. E. Quarles van Ufford, Thomas C. Kwee, Frederik J. Beek, Maarten S. van Leeuwen, Taro Takahara, Rob Fijnheer, Rutger A. J. Nievelstein, John M.H.de Klerk

    OBJECTIVE. The purpose of this study was to compare whole-body MRI including diffusion-weighted imaging (DWI) with 18F-FDG PET/CT in the staging of newly diagnosed lymphoma.

    SUBJECTS AND METHODS. Twenty-two consecutively registered patients with newly diagnosed lymphoma prospectively underwent whole-body MRI (22 with T1 -weight-ed, STIR, and DWI sequences and 21 with Tl-weighted and STIR sequences but not DWI) and FDG PET/CT. Whole-body MRI-DWI was independently evaluated by two blinded observers. Interobserver agreement was assessed, and whole-body MRI-DWI was compared with FDG PET/CT.

    RESULTS. The kappa values for interobserver agreement on whole-body MRI-DWI for all nodal regions together and for all extranodal regions together were 0.676 and 0.452. The kappa values for agreement between whole-body MRI-DWI and FDG PET/CT for all nodal regions together and for all extranodal regions together were 0.597 and 0.507. Ann Arbor stage according to whole-body MRI-DWI findings was concordant with that of FDG PET/CT findings in 77% (17/22) of patients. Understaging and overstaging relative to the findings with FDG PET/CT occurred in 0% (0/22) and 23% (5/22) of cases. In the care of 9% (2/22) of patients, overstaging with whole-body MRI-DWI relative to staging with FDG PET/CT would have had therapeutic consequences.

    CONCLUSION. Our early results indicate that overall interobserver agreement on whole-body MRI-DWI findings is moderate to good. Overall agreement between whole-body MRI-DWI and FDG PET/CT is moderate. In the care of patients with newly diagnosed lymphoma, staging with whole-body MRI-DWI does not result in underestimation of stage rela-tive to the results with FDG PET/CT. In a minority of patients, reliance on whole-body MRI-DWI leads to clinically important overstaging relative to the results with FDG PET/CT. FDG PET/CT remains the reference standard for lymphoma staging until larger-scale studies show that use of whole-body MRI-DWI results in correct staging in this minority of cases.