Literature DB >> 12679395

Early response to chemotherapy in hypopharyngeal cancer: assessment with (11)C-methionine PET, correlation with morphologic response, and clinical outcome.

Eric Chesnay1, Emmanuel Babin, Jean Marc Constans, Denis Agostini, Arnaud Bequignon, Armelle Regeasse, Franck Sobrio, Sylvain Moreau.   

Abstract

UNLABELLED: Neoadjuvant chemotherapy in hypopharyngeal cancer globally improves survival, but some patients do not respond to chemotherapy and adjuvant therapy is delayed. Prediction of response to chemotherapy may allow physicians to optimize planned treatment. The aim of this study was to compare treatment response assessed early with (11)C-methionine PET and morphologic response assessed after treatment completion with MRI.
METHODS: Thirteen patients with previously untreated squamous cell carcinoma of the hypopharynx, T3 or T4, were included. All patients received 3 courses of chemotherapy comprising cisplatin and 5-fluorouracil. (11)C-Methionine PET was performed before and after the first course of chemotherapy. PET estimation of response was expressed in relative variation of mean standardized uptake value (SUVmean), maximal standardized uptake value (SUVmax), volume of (11)C-methionine tumor uptake, and total tumor uptake. Posttreatment response was assessed with MRI, which was performed before the first course and after treatment completion, and expressed in relative variation of tumor volume. Patients were considered responders if their tumor volume was reduced by more than 50%.
RESULTS: The relative decrease in all PET parameters correlated significantly with the relative decrease in MRI volume. The larger area under the receiver operating characteristic curve was obtained for SUVmean (0.883), but that area was close to the area of SUVmax (0.857). For methodologic considerations, SUVmax was more reproducible. The optimal threshold of response for SUVmax was -25%, leading to a mean of 83% (range, 36%-93%) sensitivity and 86% (range, 42%-100%) specificity. Using this threshold, survival at 2 y was improved for responders (83%), compared with nonresponders (57%), but the difference was not statistically significant.
CONCLUSION: (11)C-Methionine PET provides early useful information about changes in tumor metabolism induced by chemotherapy in hypopharynx cancer. (11)C-Methionine PET measurements correlate with end-of-treatment response evaluated with MRI and may thus be helpful to physicians in treatment planning by avoiding unnecessary chemotherapy courses for nonresponding patients.

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Year:  2003        PMID: 12679395

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Nucl Med        ISSN: 0161-5505            Impact factor:   10.057


  8 in total

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Review 3.  Alternative PET tracers in head and neck cancer. A review.

Authors:  Jan Wedman; Jan Pruim; Jan L N Roodenburg; Gyorgy B Halmos; Johannes A Langedijk; Rudi A J O Dierckx; Bernard F A M van der Laan
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4.  Is C-11 Methionine PET an alternative to 18-F FDG-PET for identifying recurrent laryngeal cancer after radiotherapy?

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7.  Accuracy of methionine-PET in predicting the efficacy of heavy-particle therapy on primary adenoid cystic carcinomas of the head and neck.

Authors:  Sachiko Toubaru; Kyosan Yoshikawa; Seiya Ohashi; Katsuyuki Tanimoto; Azusa Hasegawa; Koji Kawaguchi; Tsuneo Saga; Tadashi Kamada
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Review 8.  Positron Emission Tomography Imaging of Tumor Cell Metabolism and Application to Therapy Response Monitoring.

Authors:  Amarnath Challapalli; Eric O Aboagye
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  8 in total

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