| Literature DB >> 26433592 |
Rocio Garcia-Carbonero1, Roberto Garcia-Figueiras2, Alberto Carmona-Bayonas3, Isabel Sevilla4, Alex Teule5, Maria Quindos6, Enrique Grande7, Jaume Capdevila8, Javier Aller9, Javier Arbizu10, Paula Jimenez-Fonseca11.
Abstract
Gastroenteropancreatic neuroendocrine tumors (GEP-NETs) are a family of neoplasms with a complex spectrum of clinical behavior. Although generally more indolent than carcinomas, once they progress beyond surgical resectability, they are essentially incurable. Systemic treatment options have substantially expanded in recent years for the management of advanced disease. Imaging plays a major role in new drug development, as it is the main tool used to objectively evaluate response to novel agents. However, current standard response criteria have proven suboptimal for the assessment of the antiproliferative effect of many targeted agents, particularly in the context of slow-growing tumors such as well-differentiated NETs. The aims of this article are to discuss the advantages and limitations of conventional radiological techniques and standard response assessment criteria and to review novel imaging modalities in development as well as alternative cancer- and therapy-specific criteria to assess drug efficacy in the field of GEP-NETs.Entities:
Keywords: Functional imaging; Neuroendocrine tumors; Radiological evaluation; Response assessment; Response criteria
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26433592 PMCID: PMC4661203 DOI: 10.1007/s10555-015-9598-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancer Metastasis Rev ISSN: 0167-7659 Impact factor: 9.264
Main morphological and functional imaging modalities available to evaluate response to treatment in patients with GEP-NETs
| Imaging modality | Principle/target | Mechanism/radiotracer | Biological correlation | Advantages | Limitations |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| US | Tissue perfusion and vascularity: | DCE: enhanced representation of the vasculature following the administration of microbubbles | – No ionizing radiation | – Whole-body imaging not possible | |
| CT | Tissue perfusion and vascularity: | DCE: changes in density following the administration of iodinated contrast agent | – Vessel density | – High spatial resolution | – Radiation burden |
| MRI | Tissue perfusion and vascularity: | DCE: contrast average uptake rate in tissues | – Vessel density | – No ionizing radiation | – Expensive |
| Scintigraphy | SSTR2 | 111In-pentetreotide | – SSTR2 density | – Whole-body scan possible | – High to moderate affinity to SSTR2 |
| SPECT or SPECT/CT | SSTR2 | 111In-pentetreotide | – SSTR2 density | – Tomographic imaging | – Lower spatial resolution than PET |
| PET/CT | SSTR2 | 68Ga-DOTA-TATE | – SSTR2 density | – Whole-body scan possible | – Limited to SSTR2 expression |
| SSTR2, SSTR5 | 68Ga-DOTA-TOC | – SUV with IRS of SSTR2A | Idem | – Limited to SSTR2 and SSTR5 expression | |
| SSTR2, SSTR3, SSTR5 | 68Ga-DOTA-NOC | – SUV with IRS of SSTR2A and SSTR5 | Idem | – Tumor dedifferentiation and loss of SSTR expression | |
| Catecholamine transporter and synthesis | 18F-DOPA | – Urinary levels of 5-HIAA | – Whole-body scan possible | – Lower sensitivity than 68Ga-labeled PET | |
| Catecholamine transporter and synthesis | 11C-5-HTP | – Urinary levels of 5-HIAA | – Same as 18F-DOPA | – Very short half-life of radiotracer | |
| Glucose transporter | 18F-FDG | – Ki-67 % | – Whole-body scan possible | – Useless in well-differentiated tumors |
CT computed tomography, DCE dynamic contrast-enhanced, 5-HIAA 5-hydroxyindoleacetic acid, IRS immunoreactive score of Remmele and Stegner, MRI magnetic resonance imaging, PET/CT positron emission tomography/computed tomography, SPECT single photon computed tomography, SPECT/CT single photon tomography/computed tomography, SSTR somatostatin receptors, SUV standard uptake value in PET/CT images, US ultrasound
Fig. 1Coronal reformatted arterial phase contrast-enhanced multidetector CT image demonstrates multiple enteropancreatic neuroendocrine tumors (arrows) in a patient with MEN-1. These tumors and their metastases are often hypervascular. They are usually more conspicuous in the early arterial acquisition phase
Evolution of tumor response criteria: from WHO to RECIST 1.1
| WHO | RECIST 1.0 | RECIST 1.1 | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Method to assess tumor burden | Sum of products of the longest and greatest perpendicular diameters of all measured lesions (bidimensional) | Sum of longest diameters of target lesions (one-dimensional) | Sum of longest diameters for nonnodal and short axis for nodal target lesions (one-dimensional) |
| Definition of measurable disease | Not specified | CT: ≥10 mm with spiral CT | CT: ≥10 mm longest diameter for nonnodal |
| Number of target lesions to follow | Not specified | Maximum of 10 lesions (up to 5 per organ) | Maximum of 5 lesions (up to 2 per organ) |
| Response categories | |||
| • CR | Disappearance of all known disease, confirmed at 4 weeks | Disappearance of all known disease, confirmed at 4 weeks | Disappearance of all target and nontarget lesions |
| • PR | ≥50 % decrease of tumor burden, in the absence of new lesions, confirmed at 4 weeks | ≥30 % decrease of tumor burden, taking baseline sum as reference, in the absence of new lesions, confirmed at 4 weeks | ≥30 % decrease in tumor burden, taking baseline sum as reference, in the absence of new lesions, to be confirmed at 4 weeks only in nonrandomized trials with response as primary endpoint |
| • SD | Neither sufficient shrinkage to qualify for PR nor sufficient increase to qualify for PD | Neither sufficient shrinkage to qualify for PR nor sufficient increase to qualify for PD | Neither sufficient shrinkage to qualify for PR nor sufficient increase to qualify for PD |
| • PD | ≥25 % increase in tumor burden or appearance of new lesions | ≥20 % increase in tumor burden, taking the smallest sum since treatment started as reference, or appearance of new lesions | ≥20 % increase in tumor burden, taking the smallest sum since treatment started as reference, with a minimum absolute value increase ≥5 mm or appearance of new lesions |
CR complete response, LN lymph nodes, PD progressive disease, RECIST Response Evaluation Criteria In Solid Tumors, PR partial response, SD stable disease, WHO World Health Organization
Alternative functional tumor response criteria
| Response categories | Response criteria | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Choi | mRECIST | MASS | PERCIST | |
| CR | Disappearance of all lesions and no new lesions | Disappearance of any intratumor arterial enhancement in all target lesions |
| Complete resolution of 18F-FDG uptake within tumor volume so that it is less than mean liver activity and indistinguishable from surrounding background blood-pool levels |
| PR | ≥10 % decrease in tumor burden per RECIST or ≥15 % decrease in tumor density (HU) on CT scan and no new lesions nor unequivocal progression of nonmeasurable disease | ≥30 % decrease in tumor burden per RECIST considering only viable tumor of target lesions (that with arterial enhancement on CE radiological techniques) No new lesions | ≥30 % relative and ≥0.8 absolute decrease in 18F-FDG uptake (SUL peak of target lesion) and no >30 % increase in SUL of nontarget lesions and no PD by RECIST | |
| SD | Does not meet criteria for complete, partial, nor progressive disease and | <30 % decrease to ≤20 % increase in the sum of maximum arterial enhancing diameter of target lesions |
| Does not fulfill criteria for partial response nor for progressive disease |
| PD | ≥10 % increase in tumor size per RECIST that does not meet criteria for PR by tumor density on CT scan or | >20 % increase in tumor burden per RECIST considering only viable tumor of target lesions or |
| >30 % relative and 0.8 absolute increase in 18F-FDG uptake (SUL peak of target lesion) or |
F-FDG 18F-fluorodeoxyglucose, CT computed tomography, EASL European Association for Study of the Liver, EORTC European Organization for Research and Treatment of Cancer, HU Hounsfield unit, MASS morphology, attenuation, size and structure, mRECIST modified RECIST, PERCIST Positron Emission Response Criteria In Solid Tumors, PET positron emission tomography, RECIST Response Evaluation Criteria In Solid Tumors, ROI region of interest, SUL standard uptake value
Fig. 2SRS using 111In-pentetreotide (a) and 18F-FDOPA PET/CT (b) performed 1 week apart in a patient with a well-differentiated metastatic ileal NET. Planar scintigraphy (a1) shows an uncertain liver lesion (red arrow), clearly located in segment II of the liver in the SPECT/CT fusion image (a2). Whole-body PET/CT image using 18F-FDOPA (b1 and b2) shows the same liver metastasis (red arrow) but also detects an additional liver lesion in segment V (yellow arrow). Follow-up 18F-FDOPA PET/CT (c1 and c2) performed after 12 cycles of octreotide therapy identifies multiple hepatic and peritoneal implants (both abdominal and subdiaphragmatic costophrenic angle) reflecting tumor progression
Radiopeptide affinity (IC-50 values in nmol/L) profile for somatostatin receptors (SSTR) commonly expressed in NETs
| SSTR2A (nmol/L) | SSTR3 (nmol/L) | SSTR4 (nmol/L) | SSTR5 (nmol/L) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| SRS | ||||
| 111In-pentetreotide | 22 | – | – | – |
| SRPET | ||||
| 68Ga-DOTA-TOC | 2.5 | – | – | 73 |
| 68Ga-DOTA-TATE | 0.2 | – | – | – |
| 68Ga-DOTA-NOC | 1.9 | 40 | – | 7.2 |
SSTR somatostatin receptor, SRS somatostatin receptor scintigraphy, SRPET somatostatin receptor positron emission tomography, − low or absence of affinity
Fig. 3SRPET using 68Ga-DOTANOC in a patient with multiple liver metastases of a well-differentiated ileal NET. PET/CT scans performed before (left) and after 4 cycles of PRRT (177Lu-DOTA-TATE) and subcutaneous monthly lanreotide (right) show a partial response to therapy (courtesy of Valentina Ambrosini and Stefano Fanti, S. Orsola-Malpighi University Hospital, Bologna, Italy)
Fig. 4Perfusion CT images in a patient with NET liver metastases. Conventional CT image depicts a hypervascular liver metastasis in the left liver lobe (white arrows). Parametric maps of blood flow (BF), permeability (PS), and time to peak (TTP) show a different functional behavior at the periphery of the metastatic deposit (black arrows) compared to normal liver or the center of the metastasis, with increasing BF and PS and decreasing TTP. Perfusion CT provides additional information compared to morphologic imaging that may have prognostic value or be useful in tumor response evaluation
Fig. 5Perfusion CT images in a patient with liver metastases from a neuroendocrine tumor pre- and posttherapy using antiangiogenic drugs. Parametric maps of blood flow and permeability superimposed over conventional CT images. Pretherapy study (a) demonstrated increased mean values of blood flow (115 mL/min/100 g) and permeability (51 mL/min/100 g), mainly at the periphery of the metastatic deposit. Posttherapy exam (b) evidenced a clear tumor response with drastic decrease of the values of both parameters (blood flow = 12 mL/min/100 g and permeability = 12 mL/min/100 g)
Fig. 6Diffusion-weighted MRI (DW-MRI) of the pancreas. a Axial HASTE T2-weighted image does not depict any abnormality in the uncinate process of the pancreas. b DW image (left) at high b value (b = 1000 s/mm2) and fused image (right) superimposing axial T2-weighted MRI image and color-coded map derived from high b value (b = 1000 s/mm2) DW image clearly demonstrate a small pancreatic neuroendocrine tumor (arrows) with restricted diffusion at this level