| Literature DB >> 35335672 |
Nina Eberhardt1, Lynn Peters2, Silke Kapp-Schwoerer2, Meinrad Beer3,4, Ambros J Beer1,4, Beate Grüner2, Wolfgang M Thaiss1,3,4.
Abstract
Recent improvements in alveolar echinococcosis (AE) therapy can provide long-term disease control, and even allow structured treatment interruption in selected cases. Imaging has a pivotal role in monitoring disease activity, with 18-fluoro-deoxyglucose positron emission and computed tomography (18F-FDG-PET/CT) in particular having proven beneficial for assessing disease activity. Repetitive regular examinations to monitor therapy response, however, can lead to substantial radiation burden. Therefore, by combining metabolic information and excellent tissue contrast in magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), PET/MR appears ideally suited for this task. Here, we retrospectively analyzed 51 AE patients that underwent 18F-FDG-PET/MR. Patients had a 'confirmed/probable' diagnosis in 22/29 cases according to the WHO classification. FDG uptake, diffusion restriction, and MRI morphology were evaluated. We found significant differences in FDG uptake between responders to benzimidazole therapy and progressive manifestations (SUVavg 2.7 ± 1.3 vs. 5.4 ± 2.2, p < 0.001) as well as between Kodama Types 1 and 3 (F = 9.9, p < 0.003). No significant differences were detected for ADC values or MRI morphology concerning response and no correlations were present between FDG uptake and ADC values. The mean radiation dose was 5.9-6.5 mSv. We conclude that the combination of metabolic information and MRI morphology at a low radiation dose proposes PET/MR as a suitable imaging modality for AE assessment. Longitudinal studies are needed to define the role of this imaging modality.Entities:
Keywords: FDG-PET; MRI; PET/MR; alveolar echinococcosis; liver imaging
Year: 2022 PMID: 35335672 PMCID: PMC8951377 DOI: 10.3390/pathogens11030348
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pathogens ISSN: 2076-0817
Figure 1Alveolar Echinococcosis lesion type according to Kodama’s MRI classification, adapted from [19].
Characteristics of the study population.
| No. | |
|---|---|
| Age at diagnosis (mean, range) | 46.6, 17–73 |
| IgE levels (mean, range) | 331.5, 7.7–5728.0 |
| IgG levels (mean, range) | 50.9, 0–252.0 |
| ELISA Em2+ (positive/negative) | 39/12 |
PNM staging of AE.
| No. | |
|---|---|
| Liver involvement, N0 M0 | |
| P1 | 2 |
| P2 | 5 |
| P3 | 11 |
| P4 | 12 |
| PX, N1 and M0 | 15 |
| PX, NX and M1 | 6 |
AE lesion type according to Kodama’s MRI classification.
| Lesion Type | No. of Lesions | No. of Lesions with SUVavg > 2.5 | No. of Lesions with Diffusion Restriction < 0.8 × 10−3 mm2/s | Mean Lesion Size in Millimeter, Range |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Type 1 | 22 (43%) | 6 | 6 | 37, 9–83 |
| Type 2 | 11 (22%) | 6 | 3 | 45, 19–27 |
| Type 3 | 13 (25%) | 11 | 1 | 139, 34–139 |
| Type 4 | 3 (6%) | 2 | 1 | 40, 27–61 |
| Type 5 | 2 (4%) | 1 | 0 | 44, 12–77 |
AE: alveolar echinococcosis; MRI: magnetic resonance imaging; SUVavg: Standardized Uptake Value average, lesion size in millimeter.
Figure 2Box plots with distribution of average lesion size (A), average Standardized Uptake Values SUVavg (B), and minimal Apparent Diffusion Coefficient (ADCmin) (C) grouped by morphologic MRI appearance according to Kodama et al. [19].
Figure 345-year-old female patient with AE and involvement of liver segments IVa–VII and Kodama Type 3 lesion. Increased FDG uptake is observed at the lesion rim (A) with increased uptake of the contrast agent (B). High signal intensity is present in the central cystic parts in T2w imaging with fat suppression (C). Diffusion imaging demonstrates a high signal at a low b-value (b50) in the central parts of the lesion (D), a low signal at a high b-value (b800) (E), and high ADC values (F), indicative of no diffusion restriction.
Figure 472-year-old female patient with AE and a Kodama Type 1 lesion in liver segments VII and VIII. No increased FDG uptake is observed (A) and no relevant contrast enhancement (B). High signal intensity in T2w imaging with fat suppression illustrates the small cystic character of the Type 1 lesion (C). Diffusion imaging demonstrates a high signal at a low b-value (b50) in the central parts of the lesion (D), a low signal at a high b-value (b800) (E), and high ADC values (F), indicative of no diffusion restriction.
Figure 5Boxplots for average Standardized Uptake Value (SUVavg) in patients with response to therapy (left, stable disease with and without BZM (n = 44, SUVavg 2.7 ± 1.28) and patients with progressive disease (right, n = 5, SUVavg 5.36 ± 2.24, p < 0.001).