Carcinoid tumor of the appendix.PET scan results

Posted by riffieli @riffieli, Dec 21, 2022

Hi everyone i was diagnosed w a carcinoid tumor of the appendx. It was removed 8 m again along w my rt colon.
Fast forward I had a pet scan and this is what it show. I am scared and would appreciate all the help. Do you think I have metastasis?
EXAM: NM PET/CT CU64 DOTATATE

DATE: 12/9/2022

INDICATION: Appendiceal well-differentiated neuroendocrine tumor.

ADDITIONAL HISTORY: As per medical chart, Appendiceal well-differentiated neuroendocrine tumor, stage II pT3NxM0. 2/10/2022: S/P robotic?appendectomy. 3/28/22: S/P laparoscopic rt hemicolectomy. Thyroid, left middle, fine needle aspiration; smears and
thin prep: Benign follicular nodule with cystic change.

TECHNIQUE: The patient was intravenously injected with 4.60 mCi of Cu-64 Dotatate via a right antecubital vein at 8:20. PET/CT scanning began at 9:44. Patient weight was reported as 70.76 kg. Images were acquired from the skull base to the upper thighs.
The low-dose noncontrast CT data was used for attenuation correction and anatomic localization. Reconstructed images in the axial, sagittal and coronal views were interpreted. Quantitation was performed using maximum standardized uptake values (SUVmax).

COMPARISON: FDG PET/CT dated 7/7/2021.

CORRELATION: CT abdomen on 3/1/2022 and MR abdomen on 1/31/2022.

FINDINGS:

Background hepatic activity: SUV 8.6.
Background splenic activity: SUV 26.6.

Head/Neck:
There is physiologic distribution of the radiotracer in the imaged portions of the head and neck. No radiotracer avid cervical lymphadenopathy.

There is focal increased radiotracer uptake in the left thyroid gland, SUV 4.1, corresponding to a 1.3 cm hypoattenuating nodule.

There is mild ethmoid and maxillary sinus mucosal thickening.

Chest:
There is physiologic distribution of the radiotracer within the chest without suspicious radiotracer avid mediastinal, hilar or axillary lymphadenopathy. There is mild residual thymic tissue in the anterior mediastinum.

Limited assessment of the lungs due to low dose, thick slice, low lung volume technique obtained during shallow breathing demonstrates atelectatic changes at the lung bases. There are no radiotracer avid pulmonary nodules identified. There is no
pericardial or pleural effusion.

Abdomen/Pelvis:
Postsurgical changes of right hemicolectomy without suspicious radiotracer uptake within the operative bed.

There is focal radiotracer uptake in the gallbladder fossa/gallbladder SUV 12.1 which may represent physiologic excretion, however attention on follow-up is recommended. Allowing for this there is no focal suspicious radiotracer uptake within the liver.

There is no abnormal radiotracer uptake within the spleen, pancreas or adrenal glands.

Physiologic activity is seen within the renal collecting systems, ureters and urinary bladder which limits assessment for focal underlying radiotracer avid lesions in these areas.

There is variable nonspecific radiotracer uptake throughout the bowel.

There is no suspicious radiotracer avid lymphadenopathy in the abdomen or pelvis. There are subcentimeter inguinal lymph nodes with mild radiotracer uptake, SUV 1.6, likely reactive in nature.

Musculoskeletal:
There is no abnormal radiotracer activity seen within the osseous structures. There is asymmetric focal uptake in the posterior right iliac bone, SUV 2.8, without definite CT correlate.

Interested in more discussions like this? Go to the Neuroendocrine Tumors (NETs) Support Group.

@colleenyoung

Hi @riffieli, It looks like you may have received the results of you PET scan before an appointment with your doctor to discuss what this means for you. This can cause a lot of anxiety. Members here on this forum can support you as you wait for your upcoming appointment. They know first hand what it's like to be worried about test results.

Your doctor is the person equipped to interpret these results along with your medical history and any other tests you've had done.

When is your upcoming appointment to discuss the results? Was the PET scan ordered as a routine follow-up? When did you have surgery?

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I had my first surgery 8 months ago. My Oncologist was busy so I spoke to a nurse practitioner that I didn’t even know. I basically told her what it is. It is disaster!! Then after I told her she spoke to the dr called me back and said your Dr ordered an MRI of liver and right hip. So waiting to do that next Thursday. But in the mean time I’m trying to get answers. Btw I appreciate you responding

REPLY

Hi @riffieli, It looks like you may have received the results of you PET scan before an appointment with your doctor to discuss what this means for you. This can cause a lot of anxiety. Members here on this forum can support you as you wait for your upcoming appointment. They know first hand what it's like to be worried about test results.

Your doctor is the person equipped to interpret these results along with your medical history and any other tests you've had done.

When is your upcoming appointment to discuss the results? Was the PET scan ordered as a routine follow-up? When did you have surgery?

REPLY
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