| Literature DB >> 29868595 |
Jackson W Kiser1, James R Crowley1, David A Wyatt1, Ronald K Lattanze2.
Abstract
Major management decisions in patients with solid tumors and lymphomas are often based on 18F-fluorodeoxyglucose (18F-FDG) PET/CT. The misadministration of 18F-FDG outside the systemic circulation can have an adverse impact on this test's sensitivity (1) and is not uncommon (2-7). This report describes how an 18F-FDG misadministration led to a repeat PET/CT study, resulting in the visualization of distant metastases that changed the original treatment plan. The findings suggest that routine injection monitoring is indicated whenever sensitivity is critical, and support claims that infiltrations can confound interpretation of semi-quantitative PET outcome measures in patients who are followed longitudinally (2).Entities:
Keywords: FDG; PET-CT; SUV; extravasation of diagnostic and therapeutic materials; time activity curve
Year: 2018 PMID: 29868595 PMCID: PMC5962786 DOI: 10.3389/fmed.2018.00143
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Med (Lausanne) ISSN: 2296-858X
Figure 1Exam 1—maximum intensity projection image, fused axial images, and time-activity curves of baseline PET/CT scan. MIP image (above left image), taken 61 min post-injection, reveals lung mass, and abnormal uptake at right antecubital fossa (radiotracer injection site) and right axilla uptake thought to be the result of the infiltration. Black time-activity curve (lower right image) from injection arm sensor reveals severe infiltration during the first 40 min of the uptake period. Red time-activity curve (also lower right image) from contralateral arm sensor reveals minimal uptake. Fused PET/CT images (upper right images) reveal left upper lobe mass (SUVmax 24) and infiltration artifacts at adrenal level. No evidence of metastatic disease.
Figure 2Exam 2—maximum intensity projection image, fused axial images, and time-activity curves of repeat PET/CT Scan. Repeat PET/CT MIP image (above left image), taken 3 days after first PET/CT and 65 min post-injection, reveals lung mass, right adrenal lesion, prostate lesion, and some minimal abnormal uptake in left forearm (radiotracer injection site was left hand). Black time-activity curve (lower right image) from injection arm sensor reveals a nearly ideal injection. Red time-activity curve (also lower right image) from contralateral arm sensor reveals expected uptake. Fused PET/CT images (upper right images) reveal left lobe mass (SUVmax 43) and adrenal lesion.
Comparison of exam 1 and exam 2.
| Blood sugar: 4.7 mmol/L (85 mg/dL) | Blood sugar: 4.8 mmol/L (87 mg/dL) |
| Injection to scan time: 61 min | Injection to scan time: 65 min |
| Lung lesion SUVmax: 24 | Lung lesion SUVmax: 43 |
| Adrenal: not initially observed and indeterminate in retrospect | Adrenal: SUVmax: 11 |
| Staging: T3N0M0 | Staging: T3N0M1 |
| Surgical candidate: Possibly | Surgical candidate: No |
SUV, Standardized uptake value.