| Literature DB >> 30460579 |
Ellen C de Heer1, Adrienne H Brouwers2, Ronald Boellaard2, Wim J Sluiter1, Gilles F H Diercks3, Geke A P Hospers1, Elisabeth G E de Vries1, Mathilde Jalving4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Metastatic melanoma patients can have durable responses to systemic therapy and even long-term survival. However, a large subgroup of patients does not benefit. Tumour metabolic alterations may well be involved in the efficacy of both targeted and immunotherapy. Knowledge on in vivo tumour glucose uptake and its heterogeneity in metastatic melanoma may aid in upfront patient selection for novel (concomitant) metabolically targeted therapies. The aim of this retrospective study was to provide insight into quantitative 18F-fluorodeoxyglucose positron emission tomography/computed tomography (18F-FDG PET/CT) parameters and corresponding intra- and inter-patient heterogeneity in tumour 18F-FDG uptake among metastatic melanoma patients. Consecutive, newly diagnosed stage IV melanoma patients with a baseline 18F-FDG PET/CT scan performed between May 2014 and December 2015 and scheduled to start first-line systemic treatment were included. Volume of interests (VOIs) of all visible tumour lesions were delineated using a gradient-based contour method, and standardized uptake values (SUVs), metabolically active tumour volume (MATV) and total lesion glycolysis (TLG) were determined on a per-lesion and per-patient basis. Differences in quantitative PET parameters were explored between patient categories stratified by BRAFV600 and RAS mutational status, baseline serum lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) levels and tumour programmed death-ligand 1 (PD-L1) expression.Entities:
Keywords: 18F-FDG PET/CT; LDH; Metabolism; SUV; Stage IV melanoma
Year: 2018 PMID: 30460579 PMCID: PMC6246760 DOI: 10.1186/s13550-018-0453-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: EJNMMI Res ISSN: 2191-219X Impact factor: 3.138
Patient characteristics
| Characteristic | All patients ( |
|---|---|
| Gender | |
| Male | 40 (62.5%) |
| Female | 24 (37.5%) |
| Age (years) at baseline PET/CT | 59 (45–69) (range 25–80) |
| World Health Organization performance | |
| 0 | 45 (70.3%) |
| 1 | 7 (10.9%) |
| ≥ 2 | 7 (11.0%) |
| Missing | 5 (7.8%) |
| Histology primary melanoma | |
| Cutaneous | 47 (73.4%) |
| Mucosal | 4 (6.3%) |
| Primary melanoma unknown/missing | 13 (20.3%) |
| M-stage at baseline PET/CT | |
| M1a | 1 (1.6%) |
| M1b | 2 (3.1%) |
| M1c | 61 (95.3%) |
| No. of different metastatic locationsa | |
| 1 | 3 (4.7%) |
| 2 | 6 (9.4%) |
| > 2 | 55 (85.9%) |
| Organ involvement | |
| (Sub)cutaneous | 39 (60.9%) |
| Lymph nodes | 54 (84.4%) |
| Lungs | 40 (62.5%) |
| Muscular | 25 (39.1%) |
| Skeletal | 39 (60.9%) |
| Liver | 24 (37.5%) |
| Abdomenb | 30 (46.9%) |
| Otherc | 14 (21.9%) |
| Brain metastasesd | |
| Yes | 22 (34.4%) |
| 18F-FDG-avide | 11 (17.2%) |
| Not 18F-FDG-avid | 11 (17.2%) |
| No | 35 (54.7%) |
| Missing | 7 (10.9%) |
| | 31 (48.4%) |
| No | 33 (51.6%) |
| | 15 (23.4%) |
| No | 49 (76.6%) |
| Baseline serum LDH (U/l) | 246 (192–327) (range 92–11,371) |
| Normal | 35 (54.7%) |
| Elevatedg | 28 (43.7%) |
| > 1–2× ULN | 23 (35.9%) |
| > 2× ULN | 5 (7.8%) |
| Missing | 1 (1.6%) |
| Interval between baseline PET/CT and LDH measurement (days) | 0 (− 7 to + 3) (range − 39 to + 11) |
Data are displayed as n (%) or median (interquartile range)
LDH lactate dehydrogenase, ULN upper limit of normal
aIncluding brain metastases
bNumber of patients with lesions in the abdominal cavity/peritoneum (n = 27; 42.2% of all patients), adrenal gland (n = 12; 18.8%), bowel (n = 6; 9.4%), spleen (n = 3; 4.7%), kidney (n = 2; 3.1%), gallbladder (n = 1; 1.6%), stomach (n = 1; 1.6%), rectum (n = 1; 1.6%) and/or pancreas (n = 1; 1.6%)
cNumber of patients with lesions in the vaginal or nasal mucosa (n = 4; 6.3%), myelum (n = 1; 1.6%), shoulder joint (n = 2; 3.1%), breast (n = 2; 3.1%), pericardium (n = 3; 4.7%), heart (n = 2; 3.1%) and/or abdominal or thoracic wall of undetermined tissue of origin (n = 2; 3.1%)
dBased on MRI brain (n = 53) or, when missing, contrast enhanced CT (n = 4)
eI.e. distinguishable from normal brain tissue
fNRAS (n = 14) and KRAS (n = 1)
gI.e. > 250 U/l
Fig. 1Individual tumour lesions (≥ 1 ml) and their SUVpeak displayed per patient. For each patient (x-axis; n = 64), individual tumour lesions are plotted against their SUVpeak (left y-axis). Grey shaded bars represent the patient’s total MATV (right y-axis). The heatmap displays respectively the patient’s LDH level and tumour BRAF and NRAS status and PD-L1 expression. Three patients are not displayed since they only had lesions < 1 ml, which resulted in SUVs, a MATV and TLG of 0. LDH lactate dehydrogenase, LN lymph node, PD-L1 programmed death-ligand 1, ULN upper limit of normal
18F-FDG PET tumour lesion parameters on a per-patient basis
| All patients ( | Range | |
|---|---|---|
| No. of lesions | ||
| All | 18 (11–51) | 1–417 |
| ≥ 1 mla,b | 6 (2–16) | 0–168 |
| SUVpeak | ||
| Maximum | 9.5 (5.5–15.5) | 0–58.3 |
| Median | 4.3 (3.2–8.6) | 0–25.2 |
| SUVpeak interquartile rangec | 2.1 (0–5.1) | 0–42.4 |
| SUVmax | ||
| Maximum | 11.8 (7.3–18.0) | 0–67.2 |
| Median | 6.1 (4.1–11.5) | 0–37.6 |
| SUVmean | ||
| Maximum | 7.2 (4.7–10.7) | 0–30.2 |
| Median | 4.3 (3.0–7.3) | 0–18.5 |
| Total MATV (ml) | 29.2 (12.2–234) | 0–2212 |
| Total TLG | 209 (46.2–1510) | 0–16,740 |
Data are displayed as median (interquartile range)
aThree patients had only lesions < 1 ml
bI.e. all lesions included in quantitative analyses
cI.e. interquartile range of the different SUVpeaks measured within one patient, measure of intra-patient heterogeneity
18F-FDG PET lesion parameters on a per-patient basis, stratified by LDH or BRAF mutation status
| LDH groupsa |
|
| ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Normalb ( | Elevated ( | Wild-type ( | Mutant ( | |||
| No. of lesions | ||||||
| All | 13 (7–17) | 46 (20–140) | < 0.001 | 17 (10–34) | 18 (11–64) | 0.510 |
| ≥ 1 mlc | 4 (2–6) | 17 (7–48) | < 0.001 | 6 (3–14) | 6 (2–26) | 0.984 |
| SUVpeak | ||||||
| Maximum | 8.7 (4.4–13.1) | 13.3 (7.1–23.5) | 0.011 | 10.1 (5.6–18.9) | 8.8 (5.2–13.9) | 0.310 |
| Median | 3.9 (2.7–7.4) | 5.5 (3.5–8.9) | 0.203 | 5.3 (3.3–9.0) | 4.0 (3.2–8.3) | 0.317 |
| SUVpeak interquartile ranged | 1.2 (0–3.3) | 3.3 (1.5–6.7) | 0.002 | 2.7 (0–5.1) | 2.0 (0–4.7) | 0.380 |
| SUVmax | ||||||
| Maximum | 11.3 (6.1–16.6) | 15.8 (9.0–27.7) | 0.026 | 13.0 (7.3–22.2) | 11.6 (7.2–17.4) | 0.344 |
| Median | 5.3 (3.7–9.4) | 8.0 (4.9–12.0) | 0.171 | 7.4 (4.5–11.7) | 5.3 (4.0–11.7) | 0.394 |
| SUVmean | ||||||
| Maximum | 6.0 (4.1–8.7) | 9.0 (6.1–15.4) | 0.009 | 8.4 (4.7–12.3) | 6.9 (4.7–8.8) | 0.274 |
| Median | 3.9 (2.8–6.2) | 5.3 (3.4–7.6) | 0.128 | 4.8 (3.2–7.9) | 3.9 (2.9–7.1) | 0.256 |
| Total MATV (ml) | 14 (6–65) | 127 (29–512) | < 0.001 | 44 (10–185) | 29 (13–238) | 0.861 |
| Total TLG | 67 (18–448) | 1180 (200–2998) | < 0.001 | 281 (43–1541) | 199 (64–1568) | 0.984 |
Data are displayed as median (interquartile range)
LDH lactate dehydrogenase
aOne patient had a missing LDH value
bThree patients with normal LDH had only lesions < 1 ml
cAll lesions included in subsequent quantitative analyses
dInterquartile range of the different SUVpeaks measured within one patient, measure of intra-patient heterogeneity