Background: The diagnosis and management of lymphoma require a
combination of various investigations to accurately identify the subtype, stage,
and prognosis of the cancer. One of the most crucial initial investigations for
lymphoma is imaging studies such as computed tomography (CT) and positron
emission tomography (PET) scans, which can help to identify the location, size,
and extent of lymph node involvement, as well as detect any extranodal spread.
Methods: This was an observational study that investigated the results and
assessment of PETCT scans performed on lymphoma patients with initial extra-
nodal lymphoma or extranodal involvement of advanced nodal lymphomas.
This study was conducted in Assiut University Hospital, the Nuclear Medicine
Unit.
Results: A total of 112 patients were included in the analysis. Their median age
was 40 (2-86) years and more than half of the participants (54.5%) were males.
Primary extranodal disease was seen in 37.5% while secondary extranodal
pattern was 62.5%. The site of the primary lesion was cervical lymph nodes in
82 (52.6%), followed by mediastinal lymph nodes in 19 (12.2%) and the rarest
sites of primary lymphoma lesions were at the orbit, nose, skin, and prostate.
The McNemar test was found to have a significant difference in the probability
of detecting lesions between CT and PET/CT in bone marrow (P = 0.000), lung
nodules (P = 0.000), mediastinal (P = 0.01) and para-aortic nodes (P = 0.006).
Conclusion: PET/CT is superior to CT in detecting extranodal disease in the
abdomen, especially in the spleen and liver, and BM-based osseous infiltration.
PET/CT scan showed higher sensitivity, specificity, and accuracy which led to
alteration of disease staging with marked effects on the decision of treatment
regimens.