Identifiable subsets of patients with Crohn's disease are at risk of exposure to significant amounts of diagnostic radiation. Given the background risk of neoplasia and exposure to potentially synergistic agents such as purine analogues and other immune modulators, specialist centres should develop low-radiation imaging protocols.
OBJECTIVE
The purpose of this article is to review cancer- and therapy-specific tumor response assessment criteria used in clinical trials and in practice, with illustrative case examples, and to discuss future directions toward “personalized” tumor response assessment.
CONCLUSION
Although Response Evaluation Criteria in Solid Tumors will remain as the primary generalized criteria for response assessment, newer cancer- and therapy-specific criteria will play an important role in providing state-of-the-art response assessment of tumor following molecular targeted therapy and will contribute to personalized cancer care in the era of molecular medicine.
Extraskeletal osteosarcoma is a rare mesenchymal malignancy of soft tissue, histologically indistinguishable from primary osteosarcoma of bone. However, there are distinct differences in demographics, imaging features, prognosis, and management compared with osteogenic osteosarcoma. Imaging characteristics reflect tumor morphology, with only 50% of primary tumors showing mineralization. Metastases may or may not show mineralization, even if present in the primary tumor. The overall prognosis is poor.
A greater understanding of the pathogenesis has improved our ability to image and treat uterine sarcomas, both at initial staging and on follow-up. Targeted therapy is assuming an increasingly important role in the management of these lesions. It is imperative for radiologists to be aware of response characteristics and potential complications of these agents as well as conventional chemotherapeutic agents.
The subtypes of LPS with greater nonlipomatous soft-tissue components on imaging studies tend to show less differentiation and are usually more aggressive both histologically and clinically. Imaging plays an important role in the diagnosis, surveillance, and response assessment of LPS.
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