| Literature DB >> 25608713 |
Monica Coughlan, Rebecca Elstrom.
Abstract
Positron emission tomography (PET) using 18fluoro-2-deoxyglucose (FDG) has become a standard clinical tool for staging and response assessment in aggressive lymphomas. The use of PET scans in clinical trials is still under exploration, however. In this review, we examine current data regarding PET in DLBCL, and its potential applicability to development of a surrogate endpoint to expedite clinical trial conduct. Interim PET scanning in DLBCL shows mixed results, with qualitative assessment variably associated with outcome. Addition of quantitative assessment might improve predictive power of interim scans. Data from multiple retrospective studies support that PET-defined response at end of treatment correlates with outcome in DLBCL. Optimal technical criteria for standardization of acquisition and criteria for interpretation of scans require further study. Prospective studies to define the correlation of PET-defined response and time-dependent outcomes such as progression free survival (PFS) and overall survival (OS), critical for development of PET as a surrogate endpoint for clinical trials, are ongoing. In conclusion, evolving data regarding utility of PET in predictcing outcome of patients with DLBCL show promise to support the use of PET as a surrogate endpoint in clinical trials of DLBCL in the future.Entities:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 25608713 PMCID: PMC4264252 DOI: 10.1186/s40644-014-0034-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancer Imaging ISSN: 1470-7330 Impact factor: 3.909
Biological and technical factors affecting PET images
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| Any process associated with increased glycolysis | Scan acquisition parameters |
| • scan duration | |
| •Brown Fat | • bed overlap |
| •Inflammatory cause | • FDG dose |
| •Hyperplasia in the bone marrow post granulocyte colony-stimulating factor | Image reconstruction and spatial resolution of scanner |
| •Patients motion/breathing | Timing of PET scan after FDG administration |
| •Patient comfort | ROI strategy and normalization calculation |
| •Blood glucose level | Use of contrast agents during CT |
Criteria for PET interpretation
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| 1. No uptake |
| Focal or diffuse FDG uptake above background in a location incompatible with normal physiology | 2. Uptake ≤ mediastinum |
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| 3. Uptake > mediastinum but ≤ liver |
| 1.) Mild FDG uptake at the side of moderate to large residual masses with lower intensity visually compared to the mediastinal blood pool structures. | 4. Uptake moderately > liver uptake, at any site |
| 2.) FDG uptake in residual hepatic or splenic lesions should be compared to the uptake in surrounding normal liver or spleen | 5. Markedly increased uptake at any site and new sites of disease. |
| A positive scan is usually interpreted as one showing areas of residual uptake with a score of ≥4, though criteria may vary |
Definitions of quantitative FDG measurements
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| Standardized Uptake Value (SUV) [ | Relative tissue FDG uptake adjusted for amount injected and body weight | Variable based on injected tracer, time of uptake |
| SUVmax [ | Hottest pixel in defined region of interest (ROI) | |
| SUVmean [ | Average SUV within a ROI | May vary depending on operator definition of ROI |
| Metabolic Tumor Volume (MTV) [ | Total volume of lesion pixels exceeding a threshold value | Dependent on definition of ROI |
| Total Lesion Glycolysis (TLG) [ | Product of MTV and SUVmean |