|
Home > Articles
Staging of non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC)
Abstract
Staging of non-small lung cancer (NSCLC) uses the TNM
classification and is undertaken to identify those patients who are surgical candidates, either initially or after chemo-radiotherapy, and to differentiate patients who will be
treated radically from those requiring palliation and to plan radiotherapy fields. Computed tomography and magnetc resonance imaging (MRI) are used in staging and provide anatomical
information but have well known limitations in differentiating reactive from malignant nodes, fibrosis from active disease and in defining the extent of invasion. MRI, with its superior soft tissue contrast provides optimal information on brachial plexus and central nervous system involvement. Functional imaging using
[2-18F]fluorodeoxyglucose positron emission tomography is increasingly being used to provide unique information and when combined with anatomic imaging will provide better staging information for both local disease and the extent of metastases.
Author
S C Rankin
Contact Details
Corresponding address: Guy's and St Thomas Foundation Trust, London, UK
Reference
ICIS Cancer Imaging Volume 6 Issue 1
DOI: 10.1102/1470-7330.2006.0004
Date Posted
31 January 2006
Open Access is provided for this article.
Print PDF
Size
195.67 KB
Minimum Estimated Download Times
ADSL 2Mb/s (Broadband): |
1 second |
ADSL 512Kb/s (Broadband): |
3 seconds |
64 Kb/s (ISDN): |
24 seconds |
33.3 Kb/s (Typical Modem): |
47 seconds |
Screen PDF
Size
172.86 KB
Minimum Estimated Download Times
ADSL 2Mb/s (Broadband): |
1 second |
ADSL 512Kb/s (Broadband): |
2 seconds |
64 Kb/s (ISDN): |
21 seconds |
33.3 Kb/s (Typical Modem): |
41 seconds |
|