Background. Positron emission tomography-computed tomography (PET/CT) with 18F-fluorocholine (FCH) is routinely performed in patients with prostate cancer. In this clinical context, foci of FCH ...uptake in the head or in the neck were considered as incidentalomas, except for those suggestive of multiple bone metastases.
Results. In 8 patients the incidental focus corresponded to a benign tumour. The standard of truth was histology in two cases, correlative imaging with MRI in four cases, 99mTc-SestaMIBI scintigraphy, ultrasonography and biochemistry in one case and biochemistry including PTH assay in one case. The final diagnosis of benign tumours consisted in 3 pituitary adenomas, 2 meningiomas, 2 hyperfunctioning parathyroid glands and 1 thyroid adenoma. Malignancy was proven histologically in 2 other patients: 1 papillary carcinoma of the thyroid and 1 cerebellar metastasis.
Conclusions. To the best of our knowledge, FCH uptake by pituitary adenomas or hyperfunctioning parathyroid glands has never been described previously. We thus discuss whether there might be a future indication for FCH PET/ CT when one such tumour is already known or suspected: to detect a residual or recurrent pituitary adenoma after surgery, to guide surgery or radiotherapy of a meningioma or to localise a hyperfunctioning parathyroid gland. In these potential indications, comparative studies with reference PET tracers or with 99mTc-sestaMIBI in case of hyperparathyroidism could be undertaken.
Objective
To evaluate feasibility, SLN detection rate, and SLN location of lymphoscintigraphy in sentinel lymph node (SLN) biopsy for early cervical cancer.
Methods
Ancillary analysis of data from ...the multicenter prospective SENTICOL study (January 2005–June 2007) of patients with early cervical cancer (FIGO stage IA with emboli to IB1) was conducted. Preoperative lymphoscintigraphy was performed after intracervical administration of 60 or 120 MBq of
99m
Tc-labeled radiocolloid on the day before (long protocol) or morning of (short protocol) surgery. SLNs were identified intraoperatively using combined radioactivity/patent blue detection. SLNs were sampled electively and routine bilateral pelvic lymphadenectomy was performed by laparoscopy. A centralized review of lymphoscintigraphies was performed to assess feasibility, detection rates, and anatomic SLN location.
Results
Of 139 patients included in the SENTICOL study, 133 received radiocolloid injection, and 131 (98.5 %) underwent preoperative lymphoscintigraphy, with the long protocol in three-fourths of cases. The lymphoscintigraphic detection rate was 87.8 %, with a median of 2 (1–4) SLNs per patient. By multivariate analysis, factors independently associated with lymphoscintigraphic SLN detection were age odds ratio (OR) 0.91, 95 % confidence interval (95 % CI) 0.87–0.96;
P
< 0.001, and protocol (long vs. short; OR 8.23, 95 % CI 1.87–36.25;
P
= 0.005). Bilateral SLN identification by lymphoscintigraphy occurred in 67 % of cases and was independently influenced by age (OR 0.95, 95 % CI 0.92–0.98,
P
< 0.001) and protocol (OR 5.42, 95 % CI 2.21–13.27;
P
< 0.001). Although 60.5 % of preoperative SLNs were in the external iliac territory, unusual drainage patterns included the common iliac (19.6 %), para-aortic (10.8 %), and parametrial (6 %) basins.
Conclusions
Our study demonstrates the feasibility and good detection rate of preoperative lymphoscintigraphy, with better detection in younger patients and with the long protocol. The high proportion of SLN basins in unexpected territories is of interest to guide intraoperative detection. Further studies are needed to better evaluate preoperative detection and to assess the contribution of lymphoscintigraphy to intraoperative detection.
To detect the presence of hypoxic tissue, which is known to increase the radioresistant phenotype, by its uptake of fluoromisonidazole (18F) (FMISO) using hybrid positron emission tomography/computed ...tomography (PET/CT) imaging, and to compare it with the glucose-avid tumor tissue imaged with fluorodeoxyglucose (18F) (FDG), in residual postsurgical skull base chordoma scheduled for radiotherapy.
Seven patients with incompletely resected skull base chordomas were planned for high-dose radiotherapy (dose ≥70 Gy). All 7 patients underwent FDG and FMISO PET/CT. Images were analyzed qualitatively by visual examination and semiquantitatively by computing the ratio of the maximal standardized uptake value (SUVmax) of the tumor and cerebellum (T/C R), with delineation of lesions on conventional imaging.
Of the eight lesion sites imaged with FDG PET/CT, only one was visible, whereas seven of nine lesions were visible on FMISO PET/CT. The median SUVmax in the tumor area was 2.8 g/mL (minimum 2.1; maximum 3.5) for FDG and 0.83 g/mL (minimum 0.3; maximum 1.2) for FMISO. The T/C R values ranged between 0.30 and 0.63 for FDG (median, 0.41) and between 0.75 and 2.20 for FMISO (median,1.59). FMISO T/C R >1 in six lesions suggested the presence of hypoxic tissue. There was no correlation between FMISO and FDG uptake in individual chordomas (r = 0.18, p = 0.7).
FMISO PET/CT enables imaging of the hypoxic component in residual chordomas. In the future, it could help to better define boosted volumes for irradiation and to overcome the radioresistance of these lesions. No relationship was founded between hypoxia and glucose metabolism in these tumors after initial surgery.
Context:
Preoperative ultrasonography and scintigraphy using 99mTc-sestamibi are commonly used to localize abnormal parathyroid glands. In cases of discrepant results between scintigraphy and ...ultrasonography, it is important to rely on another diagnostic imaging modality. 18F-fluorodeoxyglucose (FDG) and 11C-methionine positron emission tomography (PET) have been studied, but are imperfect to detect abnormal parathyroid glands. Recently, first cases of abnormal parathyroid glands taking-up radiolabelled choline were discovered incidentally in men referred to 11C-choline or 18F-fluorocholine (FCH)-PET/CT for prostate cancer. We checked if FCH uptake was a general feature of adenomatous or hyperplastic parathyroid glands.
Methods:
FCH-PET/CT was performed in 12 patients with primary (n = 8) or secondary hyperparathyroidism (1 dialyzed, 3 grafted) and with discordant or equivocal results on preoperative ultrasonography (US) and/or 123I/99mTc-sestamibi dual-phase scintigraphy. The results of the FCH-PET/CT were evaluated, with surgical exploration and histopathologic examination as the standard of truth.
Results:
On a per-patient level, the detection rate of FCH-PET/CT (at least one FCH focus corresponding to an abnormal parathyroid gland in a given patient) was 11/12 = 92%. FCH-PET/CT detected 18 foci interpreted as parathyroid glands and correctly localized 17 abnormal parathyroid glands (7 adenomas and 10 hyperplasias). On a per-lesion level, FCH-PET/CT results were 17 TP, 2 false negative ie, a lesion-based sensitivity of 89%, and 1 false positive.
Conclusion:
As the main result of this pilot study, we show that in patients with hyperparathyroidism and with discordant or equivocal results on scintigraphy or on ultrasonography, adenomatous or hyperplastic parathyroid glands can be localized by FCH-PET/CT with good accuracy. Furthermore, FCH-PET/CT can solve discrepant results between preoperative ultrasonography and scintigraphy and has thus a potential as a functional imaging modality in the detection of abnormal parathyroid glands. Our preliminary results are encouraging and prompt us to further evaluate FCH-PET/CT as a functional imaging agent in patients with biochemical hyperparathyroidism.
Neglected giant benign phyllode tumor of the breast Benderra, Marc-Antoine; Ferrier, Clement; Buob, David ...
European journal of nuclear medicine and molecular imaging,
09/2022, Letnik:
49, Številka:
11
Journal Article
Abstract
A 77-year-old man with a personal history of familial Mediterranean fever presented with a slowly enlarging tumefaction of the left abdominal wall and persistent inflammatory syndrome ...despite good adherence to colchicine.
18
F-FDG PET/CT showed a hypermetabolic muscular mass of the abdominal wall along with other hypermetabolic lesions including a peritoneal mass and several subcutaneous soft tissue nodules. CT-guided needle biopsy led to the diagnosis of a muscular localization of a malignant peritoneal mesothelioma, which is an extremely rare complication of familial Mediterranean fever. Six courses of chemotherapy with carboplatin and pemetrexed allowed an almost complete response.
What is already known about this subject?•Rearranged during transfection (RET) gene fusion are unfrequent (1%-2%) but validated as target mutations in non-small cell lung cancer ...(NSCLC).•Selpercatinib and, pralsetinib have been authorized by the US-FDA in second line or more in NSCLC RET+.•The predominant independent mechanism of resistance to RET tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKI) is the MET amplification but data to overcome MET resistance concern only selpercatinib resistance.What are the new findings and how might they impact on clinical practice in the foreseeable future?•We report here the first case of a patient who developed a MET amplification as an initial mechanism of acquired resistance to pralsetinib for an advanced KIF5B-RET driven lung adenocarcinoma, successfully treated with a combination of pralsetinib and crizotinib then capmatinib due to an isolated cerebral progression.•An isolated progression under crizotinib should raise suspicion of poor penetration through the blood-brain barrier and motivate the switch by an anti-MET with better cerebral penetration like capmatinib.•Early evaluation by 18FDG/CT might be a compelling method to justifying the pursuit or not of combination TKI without being predictive of the duration of response.
Prospectively evaluate the impact of fluorodeoxyglucose-fluorine-18 positron emission tomography (FDG-PET) in the management of recurrence of advanced head and neck squamous cell carcinoma during the ...first year after treatment.
Seventy patients were followed-up every 6 to 8 weeks during the first year after initial combined curative therapy. FDG-PET, together with conventional imaging and endoscopy were performed systematically at 1 year (group A) or prompted earlier in case of clinically suspicious recurrence (group B). The referring physician evaluated the impact of FDG-PET on the patient's management. Another clinician checked the pertinence of decisions.
FDG-PET had a therapeutic impact in 8 of 43 group A patients and in 16 of 27 group B patients; the overall rate was 34%. This change was pertinent in 5 of 8 and 14 of 16 cases, respectively. Overall pertinence rate of decisions was 90% versus 70% without FDG-PET.
FDG-PET had a significant overall therapeutic impact; the induced decisions were either pertinent or just led to "futile" noninvasive examinations. Systematic FDG-PET had a significantly lesser impact in comparison with FDG-PET motivated by clinical suspicion.