| Literature DB >> 17114061 |
Rodney J Hicks1, Donna Dorow, Peter Roselt.
Abstract
PET scanning is an emerging technology for the clinical evaluation of many disease processes in man. The vast majority of clinical positron emission tomography (PET) studies are performed using a single tracer, fluorodeoxyglucose. Despite the excellent diagnostic performance of this tracer, it has recognised limitations. New tracers offer the potential to both address these limitations, and to establish new applications for PET. Small animal PET is a logical technique for validating new tracers relevant to human diseases. However, interspecies differences in the handling of chemicals may significantly influence the handling of novel tracers. This requires caution in extrapolating findings in animals to expectations of performance in man. Already there are several examples where biodistribution studies in mice would not have predicted the clinical utility of existing PET tracers. Nevertheless, application of a systematic approach to tracer development is likely to speed transition of new tracers from animals into man. (c) International Cancer Imaging Society.Entities:
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Year: 2006 PMID: 17114061 PMCID: PMC1805077 DOI: 10.1102/1470-7330.2006.9098
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancer Imaging ISSN: 1470-7330 Impact factor: 3.909
Figure 1A comparison of FDG and FET uptake in a primary lung cancer demonstrates substantially higher contrast with FDG and therefore, despite theoretically higher specificity for malignancy, the lower sensitivity decreases confidence in the veracity of a negative result.
Figure 2A comparison of FDG and FCH uptake in nodal metastases demonstrates higher contrast and therefore, greater sensitivity of FCH in this case.
Figure 3A comparison of FDG and FET in malignant brain tumour demonstrates substantially higher contrast with FET than FDG, despite lower absolute uptake as reflected by the standardised uptake value (SUV).
Figure 4A comparison of FAZA and FMISO shows comparable lesions but higher contrast on FAZA, aiding clinician confidence in the images and region-of-interest assignment.