| Literature DB >> 21603237 |
Anja Smits1, Brigitta G Baumert.
Abstract
The clinical management of adults with low-grade gliomas (LGGs) remains a challenge. There is no curative treatment, and management of individual patients is a matter of deciding optimal timing as well as right treatment modality. In addition to conventional imaging techniques, positron emission tomography (PET) with amino acid tracers can facilitate diagnostic and therapeutic procedures. In this paper, the clinical applications of PET with amino acid tracers (11)C-methyl-L-methionine (MET) and (18)F-fluoro-ethyl-L-tyrosine (FET) for patients with LGG are summarized. We also discuss the value of PET for the long-term followup of this patient group. Monitoring metabolic activity by PET in individual patients during course of disease will provide insight in the biological behavior and evolution of these tumors. As such, spatial changes in tumor activity over time, including shifts of hot-spot regions within the tumor, may reflect intratumoral heterogeneity and correlate to clinical parameters.Entities:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21603237 PMCID: PMC3094834 DOI: 10.1155/2011/372509
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Imaging ISSN: 2090-1720
Figure 1Transaxial postgadolinium T1-weighted MRI (a) and fused MET PET-MRI (b) for spatial correlation of the MET uptake in a glioma in the left frontotemporal region.
Figure 2MET PET of a patient with an oligodendroglioma in the right parietal lobe before (a) and after (b) surgical resection and adjuvant radiotherapy, showing no signs of residual tumor at 12 months posttherapy.
Clinical applications of PET with amino acid tracers in adult low-grade gliomas (LGGs).
| Study | Study design | Tumor subtype1 no. of patients | Results and/or conclusion |
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| Differential diagnosis tumor versus nontumor lesions | |||
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| Herholz et al. [ | Retrospective review Consecutive suspected tumors Measures: MET ratio, histology | 196 patients (99 gliomas grade II) | MET ratio 67% sensitivity and 72% specificity for differential diagnosis grade II gliomas versus nontumor lesions |
| Galldiks et al. [ | Consecutive series of children and young adults (2–21 year) with suspected tumors Measures: MET ratio, histology | 39 patients (6 AI, 6 AII, 4 AIII, 2 OAIII) | MET ratio 83% sensitivity & 92% specificity for differential diagnosis tumor versus nontumor lesions |
| Pichler et al. [ | Retrospective review Consecutive tumors or other intracerebral lesions Measures: FET ratio, MRI, histology | 88 patients (19 gliomas grade I and grade II) | FET ratio 94% sensitivity in HGG; 68% sensitivity in LGGs; 2 false positive cases (postischemic lesions) out of 10 nonbiopsy verified inflammatory lesions |
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| Guiding stereotactic procedures and radiotherapy planning | |||
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| Goldman et al. [ | Retrospective review Measures: MET ratio, FDG ratio, stereotactic guided histology | 14 gliomas (93 biopsies) | MET ratio correlates with anaplasia; FDG ratio correlates with anaplasia; inverse correlation MET ratio and necrosis; no correlation FDG ratio and necrosis |
| Levivier et al. [ | Retrospective review PET-guided radiosurgery Measures: MET volume, MRI | 5 LGGs | Spatial accuracy increased by MET volume, especially in ill-defined lesions on MRI |
| Nuutinen et al. [ | Prospective long-term followup | 14 gliomas (13 AII and 1 AIII) | MET ratio and volume: 80% sensitivity in detecting postoperative residual tumor; benefit for radiotherapy planning in 3/14 patients with inconclusive MRI |
| Pirotte et al. [ | Retrospective review PET-guided stereotactic biopsy Measures: MET ratio, MET volume, FDG ratio, FDG volume, histology | 10 LGGs (6 AII, 2 OII, 1 giant cell astrocytoma, 1 ganglioglioma) | MET ratio corresponded to histology in 9 LGGs; FDG ratio corresponded to histology in 1 LGGs; MET volume superior to FDG volume, especially for cortical tumors |
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| Evaluation of response to radiotherapy | |||
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| Roelcke et al. [ | Postoperative followup of irradiated ( | 30 AII | No differences in changes of MET and FDG ratio over time between two groups |
| Voges et al. [ | Followup of 125I brachytherapy Measures: FDG ratio and volume, MET ratio, and volume | 39 gliomas (17 AII, 2 OII, 5 OAII, 1 AI, 2 unspecified, 3 grade III, 8 GB) | Minimal effect of brachytherapy on FGD ratio1 year after seed implantation, but decline of MET ratio |
| Würker et al. [ | Follow up of 125I brachytherapy Measures: FDG ratio, MET ratio | 10 LGGs (2 AI, 5 AII, 2 OAII, 1 OII) | Significant decline in mean MET ratio before and 1 year after brachytherapy; no changes in mean FDG ratio; highest decline rates in tumors with high basal MET ratio |
1Abbreviations: LGGs: low-grade gliomas; AI: pilocytic astrocytoma; AII: astrocytoma grade II; OII: oligodendroglioma grade II; OAII: oligoastrocytoma grade II; AIII: astrocytoma grade III; OAIII: oligoastrocytoma grade III; GB: glioblastoma.
Clinical applications of 11C-methionine uptake measured by PET in adult low-grade gliomas (LGGs).
| Study | Study design | Tumor subtype1 no. of patients | Results and/or conclusion |
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| Evaluation of response to chemotherapy | |||
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| Tang et al. [ | Retrospective review Chemosensitivity to PCV Measures: activity volume index (AVI), FLAIR-MRI | 7 OII | PCV associated with drastic decrease in AVI; less pronounced decrease in tumor volume on FLAIR-MRI |
| Wyss et al. [ | Prospective study TMZ in progressive nonenhancing tumors Measures: FET ratio, FET volume, and MRI | 11 LGGs (3 OII, 4 AII, 4 AOII) | Changes in FET preceded and more pronounced than MRI changes; decrease FET ratio < FET volume in responders |
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| Differentiating recurrent tumor from changes induced by radiotherapy | |||
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| Van Laere et al. [ | Retrospective review Differential diagnosis radionecrosis-recurrence Measures: MET ratio, FDG ratio, histology, and survival | 30 gliomas (15 LGGs: 8 AAII, 3 OAII, 4 OII) | FDG and MET ratio significant parameters for survival; FDG and MET strongest prognostic accuracy; MET alone strongest prognostic factor for astrocytomas |
| Terakawa et al. [ | Retrospective review Differential diagnosis radionecrosis-recurrence Measures: MET ratio ( | 77 patients (26 gliomas: 6 grade II, 6 grade III and 14 GB; 51 metastases) |
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| Long-term followup and prognosis | |||
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| Nuutinen et al. [ | Prospective long-term followup Measures: MET ratio, MET volume, histology, and survival | 14 gliomas (13 AII and 1 AIII) | Met ratio and volume: 80% sensitivity in detecting residual postoperative tumor; baseline MET ratio of prognostic value |
| Ribom et al. [ | Retrospective review Pretreatment MET Measures: MET ratio, MET volume (untreated versus after surgery/radio- and/or chemotherapy), time-to-progression (TPP) | 32 LGGs (11 AII, 6 OAII, 15 OII) | Untreated patients: longest TTP when stable MET ratio and small volume increase; treated patients: initial treatment effects (reduction MET ratio, volume or in both) but no prognostic value |
| Ullrich et al. [ | Prospective long-term followup Measures: MET ratio, histology, and molecular tumor profile | 24 gliomas (10 AII, 7 OAII, 1 OII, 3 AIII, 3 OAIII) | Mean increase of MET in patients with progression 54.4% versus 3.9% in patients with stable disease; correlation increased MET and VEGF expression |
| Ribom et al. [ | Retrospective review Preoperative MET Measures: MET ratio, and survival | 89 LGGs (33 AII, 17 OAII, 39 OII) | Preoperative MET ratio prognostic factor for survival in AII and OII |
| De Witte et al. [ | Retrospective review Preoperative ( | 85 gliomas (28 LGGs: 12 AII, 4 OAII, 12 OII) | MET ratio prognostic factor for survival in grade II and grade III gliomas |
| Floeth et al. [ | Prospective followup Histologically verified LGGs Measures: FET ratio, growth pattern on MRI (diffuse versus circumscribed), survival | 33 LGGs (27 AII, 2 OAII, 4 OII) | 3 major subtypes: (1) low FET ratio and circumscribed on MRI most favorable outcome,(2) positive FET ratio and circumscribed on MRI intermediate outcome,(3) positive FET ratio and diffuse on MRI unfavorable outcome |
1Abbreviations: LGGs: low-grade gliomas; AI: pilocytic astrocytoma; AII: astrocytoma grade II; OII: oligodendroglioma grade II; OAII: oligoastrocytoma grade II; AIII: astrocytoma grade III; OAIII: oligoastrocytoma grade III; GB: glioblastoma.
Figure 3MET PET from disease onset (a) to disease progression (e) of a patient with LGGs in the left hemisphere, showing a gradual increase in hot-spot activity during progressive disease. This patient received radiotherapy between the first (a) and second PET investigation (b), and chemotherapy between the second (b) and third (c) PET investigation. MET PET was performed at approximately 6 months intervals from the time point of disease onset.
Figure 4MET PET from disease onset (a) to disease progression (d) of a patient with LGGs in the left hemisphere, showing a shift of weak hot-spot activity located in the left frontotemporal region (a, b), towards a stronger and more centrally located hot spot (c, d) during progressive disease. This patient received radiotherapy between the second (b) and third (c) PET investigation. MET PET was performed at approximately 12 months intervals from the time point of disease onset.