358 research outputs found

    Towards more accurate 18F-fluorodeoxyglucose positron emission tomography (18F-FDG PET) imaging in Active and Latent Tuberculosis

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    Tuberculosis is one of the leading causes of death worldwide. Although the disease is curable and preventable, it is under-diagnosed in many parts of the world. Positron emission tomography (PET) imaging using 18 F-FDG in TB can localise disease sites and extent of disease. 18F-FDG accumulates in immune cells which participate in inflammation and granuloma formation, such as activated macrophages and lymphocytes. Therefore, FDG PET/CT scanning is now being evaluated for its usefulness in diagnosis of EPTB, and monitoring response to treatment. FDG PET/CT imaging is positive and has high sensitivity in active TB, complementing conventional radiologic imaging (X-ray, CT, MRI) in the diagnosis of primary pulmonary, extrapulmonary and post-primary or miliary TB. FDG PET/CT has low specificity when it is used for solitary pulmonary nodule characterization and its ability to differentiate TB from malignancy is limited in this setting. Dual point imaging has been proposed as a way to overcome this limitation. FDG PET/CT can reliably differentiate active from inactive disease and there is promising evidence that it can contribute to response assessment to treatment with impact on patients' management. FDG PET/CT has been found positive in cases of latent TB infection and its ability for early identification of activation is being currently explored. More studies are needed to establish the method's utility in recognizing multidrug-resistant TB cases. Furthermore, other PET radiotracers might prove useful in the functional imaging of TB infection in the future

    Investigating the role of SPECT/CT in dynamic sentinel lymph node biopsy for penile cancers

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    PURPOSE: Currently, most centres use 2-D planar lymphoscintigraphy when performing dynamic sentinel lymph node biopsy in penile cancer patients with clinically impalpable inguinal nodes. This study aimed to investigate the role of SPECT/CT following 2-D planar lymphoscintigraphy (dynamic and static) in the detection and localization of sentinel lymph nodes in the groin. METHODS: A qualitative (visual) review was performed on planar followed by SPECT/CT lymphoscintigraphy in 115 consecutive patients (age 28-86 years) who underwent injection of (99m)Tc-nanocolloid followed by immediate acquisition of dynamic (20 min) and early static scans (5 min) initially and further delayed static (5 min) images at 120 min followed by SPECT/CT imaging. The lymph nodes detected in each groin on planar lymphoscintigraphy and SPECT/CT were compared. RESULTS: A total of 440 and 467 nodes were identified on planar scintigraphy and SPECT/CT, respectively. Overall, SPECT/CT confirmed the findings of planar imaging in 28/115 cases (24%). In the remaining 87 cases (76%), gross discrepancies were observed between planar and SPECT/CT images. SPECT/CT identified 17 instances of skin contamination (16 patients, 13%) and 36 instances of in-transit lymphatic tract activity (24 patients, 20%) that had been interpreted as tracer-avid lymph nodes on planar imaging. In addition, SPECT/CT identified 53 tracer-avid nodes in 48 patients (42%) that were not visualized on planar imaging and led to reclassification of the drainage basins (pelvic/inguinal) of 27 tracer-avid nodes. CONCLUSIONS: The addition of SPECT/CT improved the rate of detection of true tracer-avid lymph nodes and delineated their precise (3-D) anatomic localization in drainage basins

    Management of non-visualization following dynamic sentinel lymph node biopsy for squamous cell carcinoma of the penis

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    Objectives: To review the management and clinical outcomes of uni- or bilateral non-visualization of inguinal lymph nodes during dynamic sentinel lymph node biopsy (DSNB) in patients diagnosed with penile cancer and clinically impalpable inguinal lymph nodes (cN0), and to develop an algorithm for the management of patients in which non-visualization occurs. Patients and Methods: This is a retrospective observational study over a period of 4 years, comprising 166 patients with penile squamous cell carcinoma undergoing DSNB and followed up for a minimum of 6 months. All cases diagnosed with uni- or bilateral non-visualization of sentinel nodes in this cohort were identified from a penile cancer database. The management of the inguinal lymph nodes after non-visualization and the oncological outcomes including local and regional recurrence rates were documented. Results: Out of 166 consecutive patients undergoing DSNB, 20 patients (12%) had unilateral non-visualization after injection of intradermal 99mTc. Of these 20 patients, seven underwent repeat DSNB at a later date, with six having successful visualization. One patient had persistent non-visualization and proceeded to a superficial modified inguinal lymphadenectomy (SML). None of these patients experienced recurrence at follow-up. A further seven patients underwent modified SML with on-table frozen-section analysis of the lymph node packet; none of these patients were found to have micrometastatic disease in the inguinal lymph nodes, although one patient developed metastatic inguinal node disease at a later date. Six patients elected to undergo clinical surveillance and have remained disease-free. Conclusion: Patients with impalpable inguinal lymph nodes undergoing DSNB with ≥G2 T1 disease should ideally have bilateral visualization of the sentinel lymph nodes, reflecting the drainage pattern from the primary tumour. In the present series, 12% of patients were found to have unilateral non-visualization after DSNB. Among patients offered a repeat DSNB at a later date, localizing the sentinel node was successful in 86% of cases. Patients with favourable histological characteristics can be placed on clinical surveillance. Those with high-risk disease can be offered a repeat DSNB procedure on the proviso that SML may be carried out if there is repeated non-visualization. Larger cohorts are required to validate this proposed algorithm

    Revalidation of PET/computed tomography criteria (Hopkins criteria) for the assessment of therapeutic response in lung cancer patients: inter-reader reliability, accuracy and survival outcomes

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    BACKGROUND/AIM: Systematic reporting using qualitative evaluation of PET/computed tomography (CT) results has been demonstrated to be very accurate and reproducible in posttherapy assessment of lung cancer (so-called Hopkins criteria). Our aim was to test, in a different cohort of patients, the Hopkins criteria for assessment of therapeutic response in lung cancer and to compare the results with those obtained using a semi-quantitative evaluation of uptake. METHODS: This is a retrospective study. A total of 85 patients with known lung cancer who underwent fluorine-18 fluorodeoxyglucose PET/CT assessment within 24 weeks (mean 7.9 weeks) of completion of treatment were included. Treatments included surgical resection, chemotherapy, radiation therapy, immunotherapy or combinations thereof. PET/CT interpretation was done by two nuclear medicine physicians, and discrepancies were resolved by a third interpreter. Studies were scored both according to the Hopkins criteria using qualitative assessment of tracer uptake for the primary tumour, locoregional disease in the mediastinum and distant metastatic sites and by applying the same five-point score using a semi-quantitative measure, maximum standardized uptake value. Overall scores of 1, 2 and 3 were considered negative for residual disease, while scores of 4 and 5 were considered positive. Patients were followed up for a median of 18.5 months (range 2-139 months). Kaplan-Meier plots with a Mantel-Cox log-rank test were performed, considering death as the endpoint. Inter-reader variability was assessed using percent agreement and kappa statistics. RESULTS: The Cohen κ coefficient analysis showed substantial agreement between the two interpreters on the five-point Hopkins criteria scoring, with a κ of 0.73. There was almost perfect agreement between the interpreters with respect to classification as positive or negative according to the Hopkins criteria, with a κ of 0.89. The sensitivity, specificity, positive predictive value, negative predictive value and accuracy of the Hopkins criteria were 88.5% [95% confidence interval (CI) 80.6-96.5%), 79.2% (95% CI 63.2-95.1%), 91.5% (95% CI 84.4-98.6%), 73.1% (95% CI 61.8-84.4%) and 85.9% (95% CI 78.5-93.3%), respectively. There was almost perfect agreement between the qualitative and semi-quantitative scoring with a κ of 0.87, with sensitivity, specificity, positive predictive value, negative predictive value and accuracy of the semi-quantitative Hopkin's criteria of 86.9% (95% CI 78.4-95.4%), 79.2% (95% CI 62.9-95.4%), 91.4% (95% CI 84.2-98.6%), 70.4% (95% CI 58.6-82.1%) and 84.7% (95% CI 80.8-92.4%), respectively. CONCLUSION: The use of Hopkins criteria for posttherapy assessment in patients with lung cancer represents an easy and reproducible method with substantial to almost perfect interobserver agreement and high positive predictive value and accuracy; moreover, it is easily understood by referring physicians. Additionally, there was no significant difference when applying a semi-quantitative measure to the same five-point score

    Molecular radiotheranostics for neuroendocrine tumours

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    This article discusses the important role of nuclear medicine imaging and therapy in the management of neuroendocrine tumours (NETs). Somatostatin receptor scintigraphy has a high impact on patient management versus conventional imaging. Molecular radiotherapy is an important part of the management of patients with NETs. Selection of patients for molecular radiotherapy in NETs is based on uptake on their radionuclide imaging study. The imaging agent has the same mechanism of uptake as the therapeutic agent. Thus, the imaging study preselects patients that are likely to concentrate radiation within their tumours

    Advances in imaging of tuberculosis: the role of 18 F-FDG PET and PET/CT

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    PURPOSE OF REVIEW : To review the main applications, advantages and limitations of 18F-FDG PET and PET/computed tomography (CT), and some other tracers in imaging of tuberculosis (TB). RECENT FINDINGS : In pulmonary TB, granulomas typically demonstrate increased 18F-FDG uptake, and areas of active TB can be differentiated from old or inactive disease by dual time point imaging. However, standardized uptake value measurements are high in both TB and malignant lesions, with significant overlap that limits their usefulness. In extrapulmonary TB, 18F-FDG PET detects more tuberculous lesions than CT, is of value in assessing response to tuberculostatic treatment, and helps in diagnosing spinal infection and identifying TB-related spondylitis; however, again, differentiation of malignant versus TB lymph node involvement is problematic. 18F-FDG PET can also be considered a marker of disease status in patients with HIV and TB co-infection. Overall, evaluation of treatment response is potentially the most important clinical application of 18F-FDG PET in TB, owing to its ability to distinguish active from inactive disease. SUMMARY : 18F-FDG PET and PET/CT may assist early diagnosis and facilitate differentiation between malignancies and TB, identification of extrapulmonary TB, staging of TB, and assessment of treatment response.http://journals.lww.com/co-pulmonarymedicinehb201

    Is [F-18]-fluorodeoxy-D-glucose positron emission tomography of value in the management of patients with craniofacial bone sarcomas undergoing neo-adjuvant treatment?

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    We evaluated the role of 18FDG PET/CT used to assess response to preoperative chemotherapy in patients with primary craniofacial bone sarcomas

    Radiomics-Based Texture Analysis of Ga-68-DOTATATE Positron Emission Tomography and Computed Tomography Images as a Prognostic Biomarker in Adults With Neuroendocrine Cancers Treated With Lu-177-DOTATATE

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    Purpose: Neuroendocrine tumors (NET) are rare cancers with variable behavior. A better understanding of prognosis would aid individualized management. The aim of this hypothesis-generating pilot study was to investigate the prognostic potential of tumor heterogeneity and tracer avidity in NET using texture analysis (TA) of 68Ga-DOTATATE positron emission tomography (PET) and non-enhanced computed tomography (CT) performed at baseline in patients treated with 177Lu-DOTATATE. It aims to justify a larger-scale study to evaluate its clinical value. Methods: The pretherapy 68Ga-DOTATATE PET-CT scans of 44 patients with metastatic NET (carcinoid, pancreatic, thyroid, head and neck, catecholamine-secreting, and unknown primary NET) treated with 177Lu-DOTATATE were analyzed retrospectively using commercially available texture analysis research software. Image filtration extracted and enhanced objects of different sizes (fine, medium, coarse), then quantified heterogeneity by statistical and histogram-based parameters (mean intensity, standard deviation, entropy, mean of positive pixels, skewness, and kurtosis). Regions of interest were manually drawn around up to five of the most 68Ga-DOTATATE avid lesions for each patient. 68Gallium uptake on PET was quantified as SUVmax and SUVmean. Associations between imaging and clinical markers with progression-free (PFS) and overall survival (OS) were assessed using univariate Kaplan-Meier analysis. Independence of the significant univariate markers of survival was tested using multivariate Cox regression analysis. Results: Measures of heterogeneity (higher kurtosis, higher entropy, and lower skewness) on coarse-texture scale CT and unfiltered PET images predicted shorter PFS (CT coarse kurtosis: p=0.05, PET entropy: p=0.01, PET skewness: p=0.03) and shorter OS (CT coarse kurtosis: p=0.05, PET entropy: p=0.01, PET skewness p=0.02). Conventional PET parameters such as SUVmax and SUVmean showed trends towards predicting outcome but were not statistically significant. Multivariate analysis identified that CT-TA (coarse kurtosis: HR=2.57, 95% CI=1.22–5.38, p=0.013) independently predicted PFS, and PET-TA (unfiltered skewness: HR=9.05, 95% CI=1.19–68.91, p=0.033) independently predicted OS. Conclusion: These preliminary data generate a hypothesis that radiomic analysis of neuroendocrine cancer on 68Ga-DOTATATE PET-CT may be of prognostic value and a valuable addition to the assessment of patients
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