| Literature DB >> 23630666 |
Abstract
In the treatment of patients suffering from malignant glioma, it is a paramount importance to deliver a high radiation dose to the tumor on the one hand and to spare organs at risk at one the other in order to achieve a sufficient tumor control and to avoid severe side effects. New radiation therapy techniques have emerged like intensity modulated radiotherapy and image guided radiotherapy that help facilitate this aim. In addition, there are advanced imaging techniques like Positron emission tomography (PET) and PET/CT which can help localize the tumor with higher sensitivity, and thus contribute to therapy planning, tumor control, and follow-up. During follow-up care, it is crucial to differentiate between recurrence and treatment-associated, unspecific lesions, like radiation necrosis. Here, too, PET/CT can facilitate in differentiating tumor relapse from unspecific changes. This review article will discuss therapy response criteria according to the current imaging methods like Magnet resonance imaging, CT, and PET/CT. It will focus on the significance of PET in the clinical management for treatment and follow-up.Entities:
Keywords: MRI imaging; PET-CT; glioblastoma multiforme; monitoring; radiation therapy
Year: 2013 PMID: 23630666 PMCID: PMC3635015 DOI: 10.3389/fonc.2013.00104
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Oncol ISSN: 2234-943X Impact factor: 6.244
Studies showing limitation of conventional MRI.
| Author | Evidence | Reference |
|---|---|---|
| Taal | 18 out of 36 patients, (50%) were diagnosed with pseudoprogression 4 weeks after radiation therapy and concomitant temozolomide. | Taal et al. ( |
| Mullins | Individual patterns of enhancement are not enough to distinguish necrosis from predominant tumor progression. | Mullins et al. ( |
| Rachinger | For patients with glioma undergoing multimodal treatment or various forms of irradiation, conventional follow-up with MRI is insufficient to distinguish between benign side effects of therapy and tumor recurrence | Rachinger et al. ( |
Studies evaluating the role of AA-PET in the follow-up of glioma and in the differentiation between recurrent tumors and pseudoprogression/radiation necrosis.
| Author | Title | Reference |
|---|---|---|
| Tripathi M | Comparison of F-18 FDG and C-11 methionine PET/CT for the evaluation of recurrent primary brain tumors | Tripathi et al. ( |
| Langleben, D. | PET in Differentiation of recurrent brain tumor from radiation Injury | Langleben and Segall ( |
| Pöpperl, G. | Value of O-(2-[18 F] fluoroethyl)- | Tripathi et al. ( |
| Hein, P. A. | Diffusion-weighted imaging in the follow-up of treated high-grade glioma: tumor recurrence versus radiation injury | Hein et al. ( |
| Terakawa, Y. | Diagnostic accuracy of 11C-methionine PET for differentiation of recurrent brain tumors from radiation necrosis after radiotherapy | Terakawa et al. ( |
| Grosu, A. L. | Grosu et al. ( | |
| Tsuyunguchi, N. | Methionine positron emission tomography for differentiation of recurrent brain tumor and radiation necrosis after stereotactic radiosurgery in malignant glioma | Tsuyuguchi et al. ( |
| Dhermain, F. G. | Advanced MRI and PET imaging for assessment of treatment response in patients with gliomas | Dhermain et al. ( |