| Literature DB >> 34287265 |
Angelina Cistaro1,2, Domenico Albano3, Pierpaolo Alongi4, Riccardo Laudicella5, Daniele Antonio Pizzuto6, Giuseppe Formica5, Cinzia Romagnolo7, Federica Stracuzzi5, Viviana Frantellizzi8, Arnoldo Piccardo1,2, Natale Quartuccio2,9.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: This review aims to provide a summary of the clinical indications and limitations of PET imaging with different radiotracers, including 18F-fluorodeoxyglucose (18F-FDG) and other radiopharmaceuticals, in pediatric neuro-oncology, discussing both supratentorial and infratentorial tumors, based on recent literature (from 2010 to present).Entities:
Keywords: brain tumors; pediatrics; positron emission tomography
Year: 2021 PMID: 34287265 PMCID: PMC8293135 DOI: 10.3390/curroncol28040226
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Curr Oncol ISSN: 1198-0052 Impact factor: 3.677
Figure 1Transaxial CT (A), PET (B) and fused PET/CT (C) and maximum intensity projection (D) images of a medulloblastoma.
Figure 2Transaxial CT (A), PET (B) and fused PET/CT (C) images of a pontine glioma.
Figure 3Transaxial CT (A), PET (B) and fused PET/CT (C) and maximum intensity projection (D) images of a frontal ganglioglioma.
Biographical features of the main studies using 18F-FDG PET imaging in pediatric brain tumors.
| 1st Authors | Year | Journal | Country | Study Design | N pts | Tumor Location | Histology |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Phi [ | 2010 | JNM | Korea | retrospective | 30 | supratentorial | 11 FCD; 8 DNT; 11 GG |
| Moharir [ | 2010 | EJNMMI | Australia | retrospective | 18 | supratentorial | 7 OPG; 7 PNF; 4 OPG + PNF |
| Pirotte [ | 2010 | J neurosurg pediatrics | Belgium | prospective | 85 | Supratentorial | 10 GBM; 10 AA; 13 LGA; 5 PNET; 3 germ cell tumor; 14 PA; 11 ependymoma; 9 GG; 10 OD |
| Zukotynski [ | 2011 | JNM | USA | prospective | 40 | NR | NR |
| Goda [ | 2013 | Ped Neurosurgery | India | prospective | 20 | infratentorial | 20 DIPG |
| Zukotynski [ | 2013 | JNM | USA | retrospective | 24 | supratentorial | 7 HGG; 9 LGG; 4 BSG; 2 medulloblastoma; 2 ependynoma |
| Laser [ | 2013 | Neuro-oncology | USA | prospective | 10 | supratentorial | craniopharyngioma |
| Zukotynski [ | 2014 | JNM | USA | retrospective | 203 | supratentorial | 71 BSG; 24 GBM; 30 AA; 23 astrocytoma; 15 ependymoma; 10 medulloblastoma; 5 pineoblastoma; 25 other |
| Hua [ | 2015 | JNS pediatrics | USA | prospective | 50 | supratentorial | craniopharyngioma |
| Zukotynski [ | 2017 | JNM | USA | prospective | 33 | infratentorial | 33 PG |
FCD: focalcorticaldysplasia; DNT: dysembryoplasticneuroepithelial tumors; GG: ganglioglioma; OPG: opticpathwaygliomas; PNF: plexiformneurofibroma; AA: anaplasticastrocytoma; LGA: low-grade astrocytoma; GBM: glioblastoma multiforme; PNET: primitive neuroectodermal tumor; OD: oligodendroglioma; PA: pilocyticastrocytoma; DNET: dysembryoplasticneuroectodermal tumor; DIPG: diffuse intrinsic pontine glioma; HGG: high-grade glioma; BSG: brain stem glioma; NR: not reported.
Technical features of the main studies using 18F-FDG PET imaging in pediatric brain tumors.
| 1st Authors | Device | Activity Injected MBq Mean (Range) | Uptake Time Min | PET Analysis | Semiquantitative Parameters | SUV Max Mean (Range) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Phi [ | PET or PET/CT | 7.4 MBq/Kg | 40 | visual and semiquantitative | LGR | NR |
| Moharir [ | PET/CT | 370 MBq | 30 | visual and semiquantitative | SUVmax | 2.89 (1.75–5.57) |
| Pirotte [ | PET | 222–333 | 40–60 | visual | N/A | N/A |
| Zukotynski [ | PET | 5.55 MBq/Kg (18–370) | 40–60 | visual | N/A | N/A |
| Goda [ | PET/CT | NR | NR | visual and semiquantitative | SUVmax | NR |
| Zukotynski [ | PET | 5.55 MBq/Kg (18–370) | 40–60 | visual | N/A | N/A |
| Laser [ | PET/CT | 5.5 MBq/Kg | 60 | visual and semiquantitative | SUVmax | 2.65 (1.3–7.4) |
| Zukotynski [ | PET | 5.55 MBq/Kg (18–370) | 40–60 | visual | N/A | N/A |
| Hua [ | PET/CT | 5.55 MBq/Kg (74–444) | 60 | visual and semiquantitative | SUVmax and ratios | NR |
| Zukotynski [ | PET | 5.55 MBq/Kg (18–370) | 40–60 | visual and semiquantitative | SUVmax | NR |
LGR: lesion to gray matter ratio; NR: not reported; N/A: not applicable.
Major findings of studies on non-FDG PET tracers.
| Author | Journal | Year | Tacer | N | Major Findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pirotte, B.J. [ | Journal of neurosurgery. Pediatrics | 2010 | 11C-MET | 85 | 11C-MET PET allowed the diagnosis of a higher grading than MRI |
| Laser, B.S. [ | Neuro-oncology | 2013 | 11C-MET | 10 | (11)C MET PET uptake is significantly greater within the tumor compared with non-involved background white matter, making it more useful than FDG PET in identifying active tumor in patients with craniopharyngioma. |
| Laukam, K.R. [ | Mol Imaging | 2017 | 11C-MET | 65 | Combined PET and MRI improve the evaluation of tumor activity, extent, type/grade prediction, and therapy-induced changes in patients with glioma and serve information highly relevant for diagnosis and management. |
| Phi, J.H. [ | J Nucl Med | 2010 | 11C-MET AND 18F-FDG | 30 | (18)F-FDG does not contribute to the differential diagnosis and that another tracer such as (11)C-methinine is required. |
| Rheims, S. [ | Neuro-oncology | 2014 | 11C-MET | 77 | Normal MET-PET findings in patients with an epileptogenic non-rapidly progressing brain tumor are highly suggestive of DNT, whereas a markedly increased tumor methionine uptake makes this diagnosis unlikely. |
| Misch, M. [ | ChNS: official journal of the International Society for Pediatric Neurosurgery | 2015 | 18F-FET | 26 | (18)F-FET-PET imaging is helpful for target selection and can be integrated in surgical guidance. (18)F-FET-PET image-guided surgical targeting yielded histological diagnosis in pediatric brain tumor patients. |
| Morana, G. [ | J Nucl Med | 2014 | 18F-DOPA | 13 | (18)F-DOPA PET/MR image fusion may be a reliable imaging biomarker of pediatric IAs. Information gathered by this combined imaging approach can be readily transferred to the everyday practice and may help clinicians to better stratify patients with IAs, especially diffuse astrocytomas and gliomatosis cerebri, for diagnostic, therapeutic, and prognostic purposes. |
| Morana, G. [ | European journal of nuclear medicine and molecular imaging | 2016 | 18F-DOPA | 28 | (18)F-DOPA PET/CT correctly detected involvement of the dorsal striatum in lesions with a T/S ratio >1, but appeared to be less suitable for evaluation of the ventral striatum. The use of fused (18)F-DOPA PET/MRI further improves the accuracy for evaluation of the ventral striatum. |
| Morana, G. [ | European journal of nuclear medicine and molecular imaging | 2017 | 18F-DOPA | 26 | 18F-DOPA PET provide useful complementary information for pediatric DAT grading. 18F-DOPA uptake better correlates with PFS prediction. Combining MRI and PET data provides the highest predictive power for prognosticating tumor progression |
| Morana, G. [ | Neuro-oncology | 2015 | 18F-DOPA | 27 | (18)F-DOPA uptake better discriminates low-grade from high-grade gliomas and is an independent predictor of outcome vs H-MRS |
| Marner, L. [ | Clin Transl Imaging | 2017 | 18F-FET | 300 | PET/MRI scan may increase accuracy in discriminating recurrence from treatment changes, although sequential same-day imaging on separate systems will often constitute a reliable and cost-effective alternative. |