ABSTRACT A 32-year-old woman with a history of pelvic sarcoma underwent whole-body fluorine-18 fluorodeoxyglucose positron emission tomography (PET) and computed tomographic (CT) fusion imaging for restaging after primary surgery and adjuvant combined radiation and chemotherapy. Interpreting the PET images alone showed an area of focal tracer accumulation in the pelvic floor and was interpreted as being secondary to urine contamination. Image fusion with fully coregistered CT scans showed a localized site of increased uptake from a metastasis to the labia, which was confirmed by biopsy. The presented case illustrates the usefulness of combined PET/CT fusion imaging to overcome some pitfalls of PET imaging alone (eg, differentiating malignant tumor from pooling of tracer in the genitourinary tract or contamination).