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Is 18F-fluorodeoxyglucose positron emission tomography
meaningful for estimating the efficacy of corticosteroid
therapy in patients with autoimmune pancreatitis?

Research Abstract
Abstract Background Autoimmune pancreatitis (AIP) is often misdiagnosed as pancreatic cancer (PC). Both conditions accumulate 18F-fluorodeoxyglucose (FDG), so FDG positron emission tomography (FDG-PET) is not discriminatory. This study aimed to evaluate the pattern of FDG accumulation, and the change in FDG uptake after steroid treatment in AIP and PC. Methods We compared FDG-PET patterns between 18 patients with AIP and 20 patients with PC, and also evaluated the short-term changes in FDG uptake after steroid therapy. Results FDG uptake was observed in 88.9% in AIP and 90.0% in PC. FDG uptake in extra-abdominal lymph nodes was seen more frequently in AIP, and uptake in salivary glands, eyes and biliary ducts was seen only in AIP. Follow- up PET was performed in 6 AIP patients and in 3 PC patients. Changes in SUVmax after steroid therapy were estimated within 1 week in 5 AIP patients and in all 3 PC patients, retrospectively. In 4 AIP patients, the change in SUVmax was more than 10%. On the other hand, in PC, SUVmax increased or remained almost unchanged (within 10%). Conclusions FDG-PET pattern at baseline, and a decrease in FDG uptake after a short steroid trial can be
Research Authors
Minoru Shigekawa Æ Kenji Yamao Æ Akira Sawaki Æ Kazuo Hara Æ
Tadayuki Takagi Æ Vikram Bhatia Æ Masami Nishio Æ Tsuneo Tamaki Æ
Hussein El-Amin Æ Zain EL-Abdeen Ahmed Sayed Æ Nobumasa Mizuno
Research Department
Research Journal
Japanese Society of Hepato-Biliary-Pancreatic Surgery and Springer 2009
Research Pages
269–274
Research Publisher
springer
Research Rank
1
Research Vol
J Hepatobiliary Pancreat Sci (2010) 17:
Research Year
2010