PET/MRI versus PET/CT in oncology: a prospective single-center study of 330 examinations focusing on implications for patient management and cost considerations

Marius E. Mayerhoefer(Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center), Helmut Prosch(Medical University of Vienna), Lucian Beer(Medical University of Vienna), Dietmar Tamandl(Medical University of Vienna), Thomas Beyer(Medical University of Vienna), Christoph Höeller(Medical University of Vienna), Dominik Berzaczy(Medical University of Vienna), Markus Raderer(Medical University of Vienna), Matthias Preusser(Medical University of Vienna), Maximilian J. Hochmair(Ludwig Boltzmann Institute for Lung Health), Barbara Kiesewetter(Medical University of Vienna), Christian Scheuba(Medical University of Vienna), Ahmed Ba‐Ssalamah(Medical University of Vienna), Georgios Karanikas(Medical University of Vienna), Julia Kesselbacher(Medical University of Vienna), Gerald W. Prager(Medical University of Vienna), Karin Dieckmann(Medical University of Vienna), Stephan Polterauer(Medical University of Vienna), Michael Weber(Medical University of Vienna), Ivo Rausch(Medical University of Vienna), Bernhard Brauner(Siemens (Austria)), Harald Eidherr(Medical University of Vienna), Wolfgang Wadsak(Center For Biomarker Research In Medicine), Alexander Haug(Medical University of Vienna)
European Journal of Nuclear Medicine and Molecular Imaging
August 13, 2019
Cited by 154Open Access
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Abstract

PURPOSE: PET/MRI has recently been introduced into clinical practice. We prospectively investigated the clinical impact of PET/MRI compared with PET/CT, in a mixed population of cancer patients, and performed an economic evaluation of PET/MRI. METHODS: F]FDOPA, depending on tumor histology. PET/MRI and PET/CT were rated separately, and lesions were assessed per anatomic region; based on regions, per-examination and per-patient accuracies were determined. A simulated, multidisciplinary team meeting served as reference standard and determined whether differences between PET/CT and PET/MRI affected patient management. The McNemar tests were used to compare accuracies, and incremental cost-effectiveness ratios (ICERs) for PET/MRI were calculated. RESULTS: Two hundred sixty-three patients (330 same-day PET/CT and PET/MRI examinations) were included. PET/MRI was accurate in 319/330 examinations and PET/CT in 277/330 examinations; the respective accuracies of 97.3% and 83.9% differed significantly (P < 0.001). The additional findings on PET/MRI-mainly liver and brain metastases-had implications for patient management in 21/263 patients (8.0%). The per-examination cost was 596.97 EUR for PET/MRI and 405.95 EUR for PET/CT. ICERs for PET/MRI were 14.26 EUR per percent of diagnostic accuracy and 23.88 EUR per percent of correctly managed patients. CONCLUSIONS: PET/MRI enables more appropriate management than PET/CT in a nonnegligible fraction of cancer patients. Since the per-examination cost is about 50% higher for PET/MRI than for PET/CT, a histology-based triage of patients to either PET/MRI or PET/CT may be meaningful.


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