Background
Selection of patients for hepatic resection of colorectal liver metastases is still limited. After conventional work up by
computed tomography (CT) scan, 60% of patients will develop recurrent disease in the early years after resection. The aim
of the present study was to evaluate whether an additional fluorine-18-deoxyglucose positron emission tomography (FDG-PET)
improves patient selection and therefore adds value to select patients for curative liver resection.
Methods
Data from 203 patients selected for surgical treatment of colorectal liver metastases between 1995 and 2003 were collected
in a prospective database. Group A consisted of 100 consecutive patients selected for hepatic surgery by conventional diagnostic
imaging (CT chest and abdomen) only. Group B consisted of 103 consecutive patients selected for hepatic surgery by conventional
diagnostic methods plus an additional FDG-PET.
Results
The number of patients with futile surgery, in which further treatment was considered inappropriate at laparotomy, was 28.0%
in group A and 19.4% in group B. The reason for unresectable disease differed between groups. In group A, 10/100 (10.0%) patients
showed extrahepatic abdominal disease versus 2/103 patients (1.9%) in group B (P = .017). In all other cases, resection was not performed because liver disease proved too extensive at laparotomy. For patients
ultimately undergoing surgical treatment of the metastases, survival was comparable between groups. Overall survival at 3
years was 57.1% in group A versus 60.1% in group B. Disease-free survival at 3 years was 23.0% in group A and 31.4% in group
B.
Conclusions
In patients with colorectal liver metastases, FDG-PET may reduce the number of negative laparotomies. However, the effect
size on the selection of these patients seems not sufficient enough to affect the overall and disease-free survival after
treatment.
Keywords Colorectal - Liver metastases - FDG-PET - CT - Surgery - Extrahepatic disease