Literature DB >> 17015896

Kinetic analysis of 3'-deoxy-3'-18F-fluorothymidine in patients with gliomas.

Mark Muzi1, Alexander M Spence, Finbarr O'Sullivan, David A Mankoff, Joanne M Wells, John R Grierson, Jeanne M Link, Kenneth A Krohn.   

Abstract

UNLABELLED: 3'-Deoxy-3'-fluorothymidine (FLT), a thymidine analog, is under investigation for monitoring cellular proliferation in gliomas, a potential measure of disease progression and response to therapy. Uptake may result from retention in the biosynthetic pathway or leakage via the disrupted blood-tumor barrier. Visual analysis or static measures of 18F-FLT uptake are problematic as transport and retention cannot be distinguished.
METHODS: Twelve patients with primary brain tumors were imaged for 90 min of dynamic 18F-FLT PET with arterial blood sampling. Total blood activity was corrected for labeled metabolites to provide an FLT input function. A 2-tissue compartment, 4-rate-constant model was used to determine blood-to-tissue transport (K1) and metabolic flux (K(FLT)). Modeling results were compared with MR images of blood-brain barrier (BBB) breakdown revealed by gadolinium (Gd) contrast enhancement. Parametric image maps of K1 and K(FLT) were produced by a mixture analysis approach.
RESULTS: Similar to prior work with 11C-thymidine, identifiability analysis showed that K1 (transport) and K(FLT) (flux) could be estimated independently for sufficiently high K1 values. However, estimation of K(FLT) was less robust at low K1 values, particularly those close to normal brain. K1 was higher for MRI contrast-enhancing (CE) tumors (0.053 +/- 0.029 mL/g/min) than noncontrast-enhancing (NCE) tumors (0.005 +/- 0.002 mL/g/min; P < 0.02), and K(FLT) was higher for high-grade tumors (0.018 +/- 0.008 mL/g/min, n = 9) than low-grade tumors (0.003 +/- 0.003 mL/g/min, n = 3; P < 0.01). The flux in NCE tumors was indistinguishable from contralateral normal brain (0.002 +/- 0.001 mL/g/min). For CE tumors, K1 was higher than K(FLT). Parametric images matched region-of-interest estimates of transport and flux. However, no patient has 18F-FLT uptake outside of the volume of increased permeability defined by MRI T1+Gd enhancement.
CONCLUSION: Modeling analysis of 18F-FLT PET data yielded robust estimates of K1 and K(FLT) for enhancing tumors with sufficiently high K1 and provides a clearer understanding of the relationship between transport and retention of 18F-FLT in gliomas. In tumors that show breakdown of the BBB, transport dominates 18F-FLT uptake. Transport across the BBB and modest rates of 18F-FLT phosphorylation appear to limit the assessment of cellular proliferation using 18F-FLT to highly proliferative tumors with significant BBB breakdown.

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Year:  2006        PMID: 17015896

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


  58 in total

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Authors:  James R Fink; Mark Muzi; Melinda Peck; Kenneth A Krohn
Journal:  J Nucl Med       Date:  2015-08-20       Impact factor: 10.057

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Review 4.  Positron emission tomography imaging of cancer biology: current status and future prospects.

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5.  Heterogeneity in stabilization phenomena in FLT PET images of canines.

Authors:  Urban Simoncic; Robert Jeraj
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6.  Fully parametric imaging with reversible tracer 18F-FLT within a reasonable time.

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Journal:  Radiol Phys Technol       Date:  2016-07-05

7.  Structural and practical identifiability of dual-input kinetic modeling in dynamic PET of liver inflammation.

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8.  Evaluation of 3'-deoxy-3'-[18F]-fluorothymidine (18F-FLT) kinetics correlated with thymidine kinase-1 expression and cell proliferation in newly diagnosed gliomas.

Authors:  Aya Shinomiya; Nobuyuki Kawai; Masaki Okada; Keisuke Miyake; Takehiro Nakamura; Yoshio Kushida; Reiji Haba; Nobuyuki Kudomi; Yuka Yamamoto; Masaaki Tokuda; Takashi Tamiya
Journal:  Eur J Nucl Med Mol Imaging       Date:  2012-11-15       Impact factor: 9.236

9.  Preclinical Evaluation of the First Adenosine A1 Receptor Partial Agonist Radioligand for Positron Emission Tomography Imaging.

Authors:  Min Guo; Zhan-Guo Gao; Ryan Tyler; Tyler Stodden; Yang Li; Joseph Ramsey; Wen-Jing Zhao; Gene-Jack Wang; Corinde E Wiers; Joanna S Fowler; Kenner C Rice; Kenneth A Jacobson; Sung Won Kim; Nora D Volkow
Journal:  J Med Chem       Date:  2018-11-13       Impact factor: 7.446

10.  Dynamic small-animal PET imaging of tumor proliferation with 3'-deoxy-3'-18F-fluorothymidine in a genetically engineered mouse model of high-grade gliomas.

Authors:  Michelle S Bradbury; Dolores Hambardzumyan; Pat B Zanzonico; Jazmin Schwartz; Shangde Cai; Eva M Burnazi; Valerie Longo; Steven M Larson; Eric C Holland
Journal:  J Nucl Med       Date:  2008-02-20       Impact factor: 10.057

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