PURPOSE: To explore in a prospective trial the prognostic value of hypoxia imaging before and during radiochemotherapy in patients with locally advanced head and neck cancer. PATIENTS AND METHODS: Twenty-five patients with stage III/IV head and neck cancer were investigated with [(18)F]-fluoromisonidazole (FMISO) PET/CT at four time points during radiochemotherapy (baseline, 8-10 Gy, 18-20 Gy,50-60 Gy). FMISO PET/CT image parameters were extracted including maximum-tumour-to-background (TBR(max)) and thresholded volume at different TBR ratios. CT volume and baseline FDG-PET/CT image parameters were also included. Parameters at all time points were investigated for their prognostic value with the local-progression-free-survival endpoint (LPFS). Significance was evaluated with multivariate Cox (including clinical parameters) and Log-rank tests. RESULTS: FMISO-image parameters were found to have a strong association with the LPFS endpoint, and were strongest at the week 1 and 2 time points (p = 0.023-0.048 and 0.042-0.061 respectively on multivariate Cox). Parameters measured at baseline were only significant on univariate analysis. None of the clinical parameters, and also FDG- or CT-delineated volumes, were significantly associated with LPFS. CONCLUSION: This prospective, exploratory study demonstrated that FMISO-PET/CT imaging during the initial phase of treatment carries strong prognostic value. FMISO-PET/CT imaging at 1 or 2 weeks during treatment could be promising way to select patients that would benefit from hypoxia modification or dose-escalated treatment. A validation study is on-going.
PURPOSE: To explore in a prospective trial the prognostic value of hypoxia imaging before and during radiochemotherapy in patients with locally advanced head and neck cancer. PATIENTS AND METHODS: Twenty-five patients with stage III/IV head and neck cancer were investigated with [(18)F]-fluoromisonidazole (FMISO) PET/CT at four time points during radiochemotherapy (baseline, 8-10 Gy, 18-20 Gy,50-60 Gy). FMISO PET/CT image parameters were extracted including maximum-tumour-to-background (TBR(max)) and thresholded volume at different TBR ratios. CT volume and baseline FDG-PET/CT image parameters were also included. Parameters at all time points were investigated for their prognostic value with the local-progression-free-survival endpoint (LPFS). Significance was evaluated with multivariate Cox (including clinical parameters) and Log-rank tests. RESULTS: FMISO-image parameters were found to have a strong association with the LPFS endpoint, and were strongest at the week 1 and 2 time points (p = 0.023-0.048 and 0.042-0.061 respectively on multivariate Cox). Parameters measured at baseline were only significant on univariate analysis. None of the clinical parameters, and also FDG- or CT-delineated volumes, were significantly associated with LPFS. CONCLUSION: This prospective, exploratory study demonstrated that FMISO-PET/CT imaging during the initial phase of treatment carries strong prognostic value. FMISO-PET/CT imaging at 1 or 2 weeks during treatment could be promising way to select patients that would benefit from hypoxia modification or dose-escalated treatment. A validation study is on-going.
Authors: B Henriques de Figueiredo; T Merlin; H de Clermont-Gallerande; M Hatt; D Vimont; P Fernandez; F Lamare Journal: Strahlenther Onkol Date: 2013-11-01 Impact factor: 3.621
Authors: Catharina M L Zegers; Wouter van Elmpt; Bart Reymen; Aniek J G Even; Esther G C Troost; Michel C Ollers; Frank J P Hoebers; Ruud M A Houben; Jonas Eriksson; Albert D Windhorst; Felix M Mottaghy; Dirk De Ruysscher; Philippe Lambin Journal: Clin Cancer Res Date: 2014-10-14 Impact factor: 12.531