The diagnostic work-up of patients suspected of having neuroendocrine tumours (NETs) has traditionally been a challenging issue. The last two decades have been marked by the application to use in the diagnosis of NETs of 3 newly available diagnostic techniques: endoscopic ultrasonography (EUS), multidetector CT (MDCT), and more recently, positron emission tomography using 68Ga-labelled octreotide analogues (PET). In a prospective study conducted at a single referral centre that compared PET with conventional somatostatin receptor scintigraphy and MDCT in diagnosis, staging and follow-up of patients affected by NET, PET detected more primary and secondary lesions than other methods. Recent studies investigated the clinical impact of PET in the management of patients affected by NET, previously studied by MDCT. The investigators recently reported the results of the investigation of 19 patients suspected of having primary pancreatic NET and studied by PET, MDCT and EUS. The investigators preliminary data suggest that PET may be slightly more sensitive than MDCT in detecting small (\<2cm) pancreatic lesions; accuracy of PET and EUS is probably similar. No prospective study has yet been devoted to evaluate the accuracy of PET in the diagnosis and staging of primary duodenal-pancreatic NETs. Furthermore, the clinical impact of the adjunct of PET to the traditional protocols of diagnosis and staging of these tumours waits to be thoroughly evaluated. Thus the appropriate place of PET in the diagnostic algorithm of patients suspected of having duodenal-pancreatic NET remains undefined. The main aim of this project is to prospectively compare the accuracy of PET and MDCT in the diagnosis and staging of patients suspected of having duodenal-pancreatic NETs. The investigators hypothesised that PET is superior to MDCT in the diagnosis of these neoplasm (the dimension of the study sample is estimated in order to detect a 10% difference). The impact of PET on management plan of affected patients will also be evaluated. As a secondary endpoint of the study, the investigators will compare EUS, PET and MDCT in the diagnosis of primary duodenal-pancreatic NET. The study is designed as a multicentre, prospective, non-randomised clinical trial. All patients will undergo MDCT, PET and EUS in this fixed order.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
NA
Purpose
DIAGNOSTIC
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
142
Patients will undergo MDCT, PET and EUS. Every attempt will be made to achieve a pre-operative cytologic diagnosis of any primary lesion by EUS-FNA. All diagnostic tests (MDCT, PET, EUS) should be performed during a two month time span, in this fixed order. The nuclear medicine doctor will be blinded of findings of MDCT. The gastroenterologist will be blinded about the findings of MDCT and PET until he has completed the diagnostic EUS. For ethical reasons, the findings of MDCT and PET will be disclosed to her/him, while the patient is still sedated in the operating room, just before the FNA. The minimal technical requirement for the techniques, the requested levels of clinical competence of the operators and the procedure for critical revision of radiological and cytological and histological specimens are detailed in the protocol. For PET any 68Ga -labeled-octreotide analogue will be allowed. Before EUS, an extended-esophagogastroduodenoscopy (until the Treitz) until will be performed.
Irene Virgolini
Innsbruck, Innsbruck, Austria
Nadia Cremonini
Bologna, Bologna, Italy
Fernando Cirillo
Cremona, Cremona, Italy
Diego Ferone
Genova, Genova, Italy
Giovanna Pepe
Milan, Milano, Italy
Rita Conigliaro
Modena, Modena, Italy
Luppi Gabriele
Modena, Modena, Italy
Pellegrino Crafa
Parma, Parma, Italy
Piero Ferolla
Perugia, Perugia, Italy
Antonio Chella
Pisa, Pisa, Italy
...and 11 more locations
Accuracy of the diagnostic test.
Accuracy was computed as: (number of true positives + true negatives)/(number + true positives + true negatives + false positives + false negatives). Accuracy of MDCT and PET in the diagnosis of primary duodenal-pancreatic NET will be calculated on a patient basis and they will be compared using McNemar test. Reference standard will be considered the diagnoses of primary NET, when supported by unambiguous cytology, histology or by at least one year of follow up.In cases of disagreement between cytological and histological findings, histology will be the gold standard.
Time frame: one year
Accuracy of the diagnostic test (after exclusion of patients enrolled due to a incidentally diagnosed lesion)
Accuracy was calculated as above, but based on subjects matching criteria 1-7 of the list of clinical situations suggestive for NET (see below, inclusion criteria). Patients with a lesion suspicion of NET incidentally diagnosed during abdominal ultrasound or MDCT not performed for clinical suspicion of NET were excluded.
Time frame: one year
Number of Participants with Adverse Events as a Measure of Safety.
Number of patients with adverse events of each procedure: PET, MDCT, endoscopic ultrasonography-fine needle aspiration (EUS-FNA)
Time frame: one year
Sensitivity of the diagnostic tests.
Sensitivity (Number of true positive results/number of true positive + false negative results) of the diagnostic tests in the diagnosis of primary duodenal-pancreatic NET. Sensitivity of each diagnostic test (MDCT, PET, EUS) will be calculated separately on patient (number of true affected patients/number of true affected + number of false non affected patients) and on lesion basis (number of true positive lesions/number of true positive + false positive lesions)with its 95% confidence interval based on normal approximation.Reference standard will be considered the diagnoses of primary NET, when supported by unambiguous cytology, histology or by at least one year of follow up.In cases of disagreement between cytological and histological findings, histology will be the gold standard.
Time frame: one year
Specificity of the diagnostic tests.
Specificity (Number of true negative results/number of true negative + false positive results) of the diagnostic tests in the diagnosis of primary duodenal-pancreatic NET. Specificity of each diagnostic test (MDCT, PET, EUS) will be calculated separately on patient (number of true non affected patients/number of true non affected + number of false affected patients) and on lesion basis (number of true negative lesions/number of true negative positive + false positive lesions)with its 95% confidence interval based on normal approximation.Reference standard will be considered the diagnoses of primary NET, when supported by unambiguous cytology, histology or by at least one year of follow up.In cases of disagreement between cytological and histological findings, histology will be the gold standard.
Time frame: one year
Clinical impact of PET.
Changes in management plan in consequence of PET results. Prior to receiving the results of the PET scans, the referring clinician will be required to explicit a management plan for the patient. Following the release of the PET results, a second management plan will be recorded, including any changes resulting from the PET findings. The number of patients with changes in their management plan will be recorded.
Time frame: one year
Diameter of lesions.
Median diameter (cm) and ranges of lesions diagnosed by each technique will be calculated.
Time frame: one year
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