| Literature DB >> 31919633 |
Shuangshuang Song1,2, Ye Cheng3, Jie Ma4, Leiming Wang5, Chengyan Dong6, Yukui Wei3, Geng Xu3, Yang An3, Zhigang Qi1,2, Qingtang Lin7, Jie Lu8,9,10.
Abstract
PURPOSE: Glioma treatment planning requires precise tumor delineation, which is typically performed with contrast-enhanced (CE) MRI. However, CE MRI fails to reflect the entire extent of glioma. O-(2-18F-fluoroethyl)-L-tyrosine (18F-FET) PET may detect tumor volumes missed by CE MRI. We investigated the clinical value of simultaneous FET-PET and CE MRI in delineating tumor extent before treatment planning. Guided stereotactic biopsy was used to validate the findings.Entities:
Keywords: Contrast-enhanced MRI; FET; Glioma; Hybrid PET/MR; Stereotactic biopsy; Tumor volume
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 31919633 PMCID: PMC7188715 DOI: 10.1007/s00259-019-04656-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur J Nucl Med Mol Imaging ISSN: 1619-7070 Impact factor: 9.236
Patient demographics and histopathological characteristics
| Characteristic | Data |
|---|---|
| Total patients | 33 |
| Median age, ranges (y) | 54.33, 19–73 |
| Sex | |
| Male | 22 (66.67%) |
| Female | 11 (33.33%) |
| Histologic type | |
| Astrocytoma | 4 (12.12%) |
| Oligodendroglioma | 2 (6.06%) |
| Glioblastoma multiforme | 25 (75.76%) |
| Ganglioglioma | 2 (6.06%) |
| WHO 2016 grade | |
| Low grade (grade II) | 3 (9.09%) |
| High grade (grade III–IV) | 30 (90.91%) |
| Newly diagnosed or recurrent | |
| Newly diagnosed | 29 (87.88%) |
| Recurrent | 4 (12.12%) |
| Tumor-to-brain ratio (TBR) | |
| Mean | 2.35 ± 0.38 |
| Max | 4.91 ± 1.33 |
Fig. 1aVPET (yellow) and VCE (blue) of the 33 included patients. b There was a significant difference in tumor volumes between FET-PET and CE MRI, which produced average values of 75.75 ± 51.68 and 35.15 ± 28.12 cm3, respectively. c Tumor volume delineated by FET-PET was positively correlated with that delineated by CE MRI (r = 0.724). ***P < 0.001
Fig. 2A representative comparison of VCE and VPET in patients 11 and 27. a Patient 11: VPET was larger than VCE (37.56 vs. 4.39 cm3). The discrepancy-CE (0.10%) and DSC (0.21) values were low, while the discrepancy-PET (88.33%) and OV values (0.99) were much higher, indicating that almost all of the VCE was contained within VPET. b Patient 27: VPET was larger than VCE (56.00 vs. 38.52 cm3). Both the spatial similarity and overlap were relatively high (DSC 0.53, OV 0.65). However, the discrepancy-PET and discrepancy-CE (44% and 19%, respectively) were both greater than 10%, indicating that FET-PET and CE MRI complemented each other
Fig. 3Representative CE MRI, FET-PET images, and the relationships among the abnormal areas identified on CE MRI, FET-PET, and FLAIR images. a In patient 19, VPET was much larger than VCE. The abnormal signal areas identified on FLAIR image were larger than both VCE and VPET (type 1). b In patient 29, VCE was nearly contained within VPET. VPET was partially beyond the extent of the abnormal signal areas identified on FLAIR image (type 2)
Fig. 4CE MRI, 18F-FET-PET and FLAIR performed before biopsy, CE MRI performed after biopsy, and hematoxylin and eosin (H&E) staining (×400) of the biopsy samples. a A sample located in the region with increased FET-PET uptake and positive MR enhancement (patient 23). H&E staining showed a cellular glioma corresponding to an astrocytoma of WHO grade II–III with higher local tumor cell density. b A sample located in a region with increased FET-PET uptake and negative MR enhancement. H&E staining showed a cellular glioma corresponding to diffuse astrocytoma of WHO grade II. c A sample located in a region with abnormal signal areas on FLAIR image that did not show increased FET-PET uptake and contrast enhancement. H&E staining showed this area contained normal brain tissue with a small amount of tumor cell infiltration