36 research outputs found

    Sorafenib increases 18-FDG colic uptake: demonstration in patients with differentiated thyroid cancer

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    BACKGROUND: To assess 18-fluorodeoxyglucose (FDG) bowel uptake in patients with differentiated thyroid cancer (DTC) treated with sorafenib. FINDINGS: Visual (5-point scale) and high maximum standard uptake value (SUVmax) semi-quantitative analyses were conducted in 63 positron emission tomography (PET) studies performed in patients on sorafenib (group 1, n = 20), in a control group (group 2, n = 28) and in patients on sunitinib or vandetanib (group 3, n = 15). Moderate or high and diffuse bowel uptake (grade 4 or 5) was observed in 90% of the PET scans of group 1 versus none in group 2. Only 20% of PET scans in group 3 were scored grade 4. SUVmax values were significantly higher for all colic segments in group 1 than in group 2 (P < 0.0001) or 3 (P < 0.0004). This uptake pattern appeared rapidly (one month) and disappeared after sorafenib withdrawal. CONCLUSIONS: FDG uptake is increased in the colon of DTC patients treated by sorafenib

    SPECT/CT and PET/CT imaging in the management of differentiated thyroid cancers

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    L’imagerie scintigraphique des cancers thyroïdiens différenciés (CTD) présente la particularité d’utiliser deux radiopharmaceutiques, l’iode 131 (131I) et le 18-Fluorodésoxyglucose (18FDG). La fixation de ces traceurs dépend habituellement du degré de différenciation et de l’agressivité de la tumeur. L’objectif de ce travail était d’étudier l’apport de différents aspects techniques et d’instrumentation, à savoir l’imagerie hybride par TEMP/TDM et TEP/TDM, la point-spread function (PSF), la taille des voxels et la technologie TEP digitale, et d’explorer si d’autres traceurs TEP pouvaient présenter un intérêt. Le but de la première partie était d’étudier les performances de la TEP/TDM au 18FDG à l’étage cervical pour la détection de la maladie ganglionnaire. Une acquisition TEP/TDM dédiée a amélioré la détection de la maladie tumorale par rapport à l’acquisition classique. L’utilisation de la PSF a permis de détecter des tailles de lésions plus petites et la durée optimale de cette acquisition a été évaluée. Des reconstructions avec des tailles de voxels ultra-fines ont été réalisées sur TEP digitale pour étudier l’impact de la PSF et des voxels ultra-fins sur les données quantitatives. La seconde partie a porté sur l’imagerie 131I-TEMP/TDM et 18FDG-TEP/TDM, afin de quantifier le volume de la maladie persistante. Il a ainsi été montré que la masse tumorale était corrélée au risque post-opératoire et avait un impact sur la réponse au traitement. L’objectif de la troisième partie était d’étudier un autre traceur TEP, la 18-Fluorocholine (FCH), ainsi qu’un marqueur de la néovascularisation, l’antigène membranaire spécifique de la prostate (PSMA). Nos données suggèrent qu’un examen TEP à la FCH négatif au sein d’un nodule thyroïdien à cytologie indéterminée permettrait d’éliminer la malignité, et pourrait éviter des chirurgies inutiles. Par ailleurs, le marquage au PSMA évalué par immunohistochimie dans les néo-vaisseaux est associé à des facteurs de mauvais pronostic. D’autres études sont nécessaires pour confirmer l’intérêt éventuel des examens TEP à la FCH et au 68Ga-PSMA en oncologie thyroïdienne.Radioiodine (131I) and 18-Fluorodeoxyglucose (18FDG) are two radiopharmaceuticals used for scintigraphic imaging in differentiated thyroid cancers (DTC). Tumour uptake of each tracer depends on tumour differentiation and aggressiveness. Our goal was to further assess various technical aspects in DTC imaging workup, such as SPECT/CT and PET/CT, point-spread function (PSF), voxel size, digital PET, and to explore further other PET tracers. The aim of the first part was to assess the performance of 18FDG PET/CT for the detection of neck lymph node involvement. A dedicated PET/CT acquisition improved tumour detection compared to the whole-body acquisition. PSF reconstruction allowed detection of smaller cancer deposits and the optimal acquisition duration time was assessed. Using digital PET acquisitions, ultra-thin voxels reconstructions were performed. The impact of ultra-thin voxels and PSF on quantitative values was evaluated. The second part focused on 131I-SPECT/CT and 18FDG-PET/CT imaging, in an attempt to assess tumour burden of persistent disease. Tumor burden was correlated with the postoperative risk and affected the response to therapy. In the third part, another PET tracer, i.e. 18-Fluorocholine (FCH), and a marker of neovasculature, i.e. prostate-specific membrane antigen (PSMA), were studied. FCH PET/CT offered high negative predictive value to reliably exclude cancer in PET-negative nodules with indeterminate cytology and might prevent unnecessary surgeries. Also, PSMA expression assessed with immunohistochemistry was associated with poor prognosis factors. Further studies are needed to confirm new insights of FCH PET and 68Ga-PSMA PET in DTC

    Propranolol 18F-FDG PET/CT: A Noninvasive Approach for Differential Diagnosis of Hibernoma and Liposarcoma

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    International audienceA 76-year-old woman was referred for F-FDG PET/CT assessment of a colorectal cancer. A 9-cm F-FDG-avid fatty mass was depicted in the right thigh, suggesting either hibernoma or liposarcoma. Because MRI could not rule out well-differentiated liposarcoma, and biopsy was difficult, surveillance was decided. Follow-up PET/CT showed an increase of F-FDG uptake in the fatty mass. We repeated PET/CT after oral administration of 60 mg of propranolol 1 hour before F-FDG injection. A dramatic decrease in F-FDG uptake was observed, strongly supporting the diagnosis of hibernoma

    Thyroid Incidentaloma on 18F-fluorocholine PET/CT and 68Ga-PSMA PET/CT Revealing a Medullary Thyroid Carcinoma

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    International audienceA 66-year-old man with prostate cancer underwent F-fluorocholine PET/CT and thereafter Ga-labeled prostate-specific membrane antigen PET/CT to explore a rising prostate-specific antigen level. Both PET/CT studies showed a thyroid incidentaloma of the right lobe. Neck ultrasound confirmed the presence of a 16-mm right thyroid nodule. The serum calcitonin level was moderately increased at 25 ng/mL (<10). Cytology was non-diagnostic (Bethesda I). A right lobectomy was performed and pathology revealed a 15-mm medullary thyroid cancer. Two months after surgery, the calcitonin level returned to normal at 3.3 ng/mL

    Optimization of a dedicated protocol using a small-voxel PSF reconstruction for head-and-neck 18FDG PET/CT imaging in differentiated thyroid cancer

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    Abstract Background 18FDG PET/CT is crucial before neck surgery for nodal recurrence localization in iodine-refractory differentiated or poorly differentiated thyroid cancer (DTC/PDTC). A dedicated head-and-neck (HN) acquisition performed with a thin matrix and point-spread-function (PSF) modelling in addition to the whole-body PET study has been shown to improve the detection of small cancer deposits. Different protocols have been reported with various acquisition times of HN PET/CT. We aimed to compare two reconstruction algorithms for disease detection and to determine the optimal acquisition time per bed position using the Siemens Biograph6 with extended field-of-view. Methods Twenty-one consecutive and unselected patients with DTC/PDTC underwent HN PET/CT acquisition using list-mode. PET data were reconstructed, mimicking five different acquisition times per bed position from 2 to 10 min. Each PET data set was reconstructed using 3D-ordered subset expectation maximisation (3D-OSEM) or iterative reconstruction with PSF modelling with no post filtering (PSFallpass). These reconstructions resulted in 210 anonymized datasets that were randomly reviewed to assess 18FDG uptake in cervical lymph nodes or in the thyroid bed using a 5-point scale. Noise level, maximal standard uptake values (SUVmax), tumour/background ratios (TBRs) and dimensions of the corresponding lesion on the CT scan were recorded. In surgical patients, the largest tumoral size of each lymph node metastasis was measured by a pathologist. Results The 120 HN PET studies of the 12 patients with at least 1 18FDG focus scored malignant formed the study group. Noise level significantly decreased between 2 and 4 min for both 3D-OSEM and PSFallpass reconstructions (p < 0.01). TBRs were similar for all the acquisition times for both 3D-OSEM and PSFallpass reconstructions (p = 0.25 and 0.44, respectively). The detection rate of malignant foci significantly improved from 2 to 10 min for PSFallpass reconstruction (20/26 to 26/26; p = 0.01) but not for 3D-OSEM (15/26 to 19/26; p = 0.26). For each of the five acquisition times, PSFallpass detected more malignant foci than 3D-OSEM (p < 0.01). In the seven surgical patients, PSFallpass evidenced smaller malignant lymph nodes than 3D-OSEM at 8 and 10 min. At 10 min, the mean size of the lymph node metastases neither detected with PSFallpass nor 3D-OSEM was 3 ± 0.6 mm vs 5.8 ± 1.1 mm for those detected with PSFallpass only and 10.9 ± 3.3 for those detected with both reconstructions (p < 0.001). Conclusions PSFallpass HN PET improves lesion detectability as compared with 3D-OSEM HN PET. PSFallpass with an acquisition time between 8 and 10 min provides the best performance for tumour detection
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