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. 2023 Jul 3;15(13):3474. doi: 10.3390/cancers15133474

Table 1.

Advantages and disadvantages of different diagnostic methods for NSCLC (MRI—Magnetic Resonance Imaging, PET—Positron Emission Tomography, CT—Computed Tomography, FISH—Fluorescence In Situ Hybridization, PCR—Polymerase Chain Reaction, IHC—Immunohistochemistry, FDG—Fludeoxyglucose F18).

Diagnostic Method Advantages Disadvantages
MRI No ionizing radiation exposure Limited availability and restricted access
Detailed imaging of soft tissues Lower sensitivity for detecting small lesions
PET Detects metabolic and molecular changes Higher cost and limited availability
High sensitivity for detecting metastasis Potential for false positives due to FDG accumulation
CT Widely available and rapid access Exposes the patient to ionizing radiation
High spatial resolution and early tumor detection Potential for false positives due to benign lesions
FISH Biomarkers Provides genetic information about specific cancer subtypes Requires specialized laboratory analysis
PCR Biomarkers Provides genetic information about specific cancer subtypes, Requires specialized laboratory analysis
IHC Biomarkers Provides protein expression information, Helps differentiate cancer subtypes Requires specialized personnel and equipment, results may vary depending on the method used
Next Generation Sequencing Biomarkers Provides comprehensive genetic information Requires specialized laboratory analysis
Liquid Biopsy Non-invasive and lower risk for the patient Lower sensitivity compared to tissue biopsy
Enables monitoring of genetic changes over time Potential for false negatives due to low concentration
Tissue Biopsy Provides tissue samples for histopathological analysis Invasive procedure with associated risks
High precision and detection of genetic mutations Potential complications such as bleeding or infection