Project Details
Abstract
Hypopharyngeal squamous cell carcinoma (SCC) tends to exhibit aggressive
locoregional invasion and regional nodal metastasis at presentation. It also has a high
risk of developing distant metastases and second primary tumors. Its survival is the
lowest related to other head and neck tumors. Concurrent chemoradiotherapy
becomes the primary treatment modality. CT and MRI are commonly used to evaluate
the regional spread and metastatic adenopathy of the tumor. However, conventional
CT and MRI are not absolutely reliable for the detection of metastatic lymph nodes.
They are also inadequate to evaluate the distant sites status of hypopharyngeal SCC
in a single examination session, and have difficulty to differentiate tumor recurrence
from posttreatment changes.
By virtue of its higher temporal and spatial resolutions, 3-tesla (T) MRI is more
feasible than 1.5-T MRI in examining hypopharyngeal SCC with reduced swallowing
and respiratory artifacts. The introduction of rolling patient platforms, matrix-coil
technology and ultrafast data acquisition enables whole-body MRI possible within a
single examination session. Functional techniques including diffusion-weighted
imaging (DWI) and perfusion-weighted imaging (PWI) also becomes more feasible in
the head and neck region. However, no study about integration of whole-body MRI,
DWI and PWI in head and neck SCC has ever been reported.
In this 3-year prospective study, we will take the advantages of 3T MRI (with
integration of whole-body imaging, DWI plus functional diffusion maps, and PWI to
conventional MRI) to evaluate 120 patients with hypopharyngeal SCC and compare
with FDG-PET-CT. We aim to (1) early detection of distant malignancy, (2) more
accurate determination of nodal metastasis, (3) recognition of biologic tumor markers
for early treatment response assessment, and (4) identification of any surrogate
markers for the correlation of patient outcome and for the selection for appropriate
treatment modes. This project is pioneer in using functional diffusion maps to assess
the therapeutic response of chemoradiaton as well as in integrating novel MRI
techniques in an attempt to provide a comprehensive, one-stop shop imaging
examination for hypopharyngeal SCC patients with the greatest cost-effectiveness.
Project IDs
Project ID:PC10101-1440
External Project ID:NSC99-2314-B182-039-MY3
External Project ID:NSC99-2314-B182-039-MY3
Status | Finished |
---|---|
Effective start/end date | 01/08/12 → 31/07/13 |
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