| Literature DB >> 35453977 |
Luca Filippi1, Francesco Bianconi2, Orazio Schillaci3,4, Angela Spanu5, Barbara Palumbo6.
Abstract
Novel therapeutic approaches, consisting of immune check-point inhibitors (ICIs) and molecularly targeted therapy, have thoroughly changed the clinical management of malignant melanoma (MM), the most frequent and deadly skin cancer. Since only 30-40% of MM patients respond to ICIs, imaging biomarkers suitable for the pre-therapeutic stratification and response assessment are warmly welcome. In this scenario, positron emission computed tomography (PET/CT) with 18F-fluorodeoxyglucose (18F-FDG) has been successfully utilized for advanced MM staging and therapy response evaluation. Furthermore, several PET-derived parameters (SUVmax, MTV, TLG) were particularly impactful for the prognostic evaluation of patients submitted to targeted and immunotherapy. In this review, we performed a web-based and desktop research on the clinical applications of 18F-FDG PET/CT in MM, with a particular emphasis on the various metabolic criteria developed for interpreting PET/CT scan in patients undergoing immunotherapy or targeted therapy or a combination of both. Furthermore, the emerging role of radiomics, a quantitative approach to medical imaging applying analysis methodology derived by the field of artificial intelligence, was examined in the peculiar context, putting a particular emphasis on the potential of this discipline to support clinicians in the delicate process of building patient-tailored pathways of care.Entities:
Keywords: 18F-FDG; BRAF mutation; PET/CT; artificial intelligence; malignant melanoma; precision medicine; radiomics
Year: 2022 PMID: 35453977 PMCID: PMC9028862 DOI: 10.3390/diagnostics12040929
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Diagnostics (Basel) ISSN: 2075-4418
Summary of main manuscripts focused on the role of 18F-FDG PET/CT for the imaging of advanced MM.
| Authors | Year | Type of Study | Setting | Number of | Comment |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Gulec et al. [ | 2003 | Retrospective, single-center | Impact on clinical management | 18F-FDG PET/CT detected additional lesions with respect to conventional imaging (total body CT) in the majority of patients and significantly impacted on therapeutic decision. | |
| Querellou et al. [ | 2010 | Retrospective, single-center | Additional value of | In patients without known or suspected MM focuses on the lower limbs, additional scan did not add significant information or impacted on clinical managment. | |
| Pfluger et al. [ | 2011 | Retrospective, | Contribution of contrast-enhanced CT (ceCT) for PET/CT MM imaging | PET/CT and PET/ceCT equally performed in advanced MM, especially in terms of specificity, therefore the use of conventional PET/CT (no-contrast media) modality is justified. | |
| Bastiaannet et al. [ | 2012 | Prospective, | Prognostic impact of PET-derived parameter, SUVmax | In MM at stage IIIB, SUVmax measured on metastatic nodes before surgery can be used to patients prognostic stratification. | |
| Holtkamp et al. [ | 2020 | Prospective, | Staging and follow-up in patients with in-transit or satellite MM metastases | PET/CT upstaged 4 out of 25 patients (16%) therefore leading to a change in clinical management. Furthermore, PET/CT detected the onset of distant metastases during follow-up in 10 cases within 6 months from diagnosis. | |
| Klingestein et al. [ | 2010 | Retrospective, | Restaging and follow-up of uveal melanoma | PET/CT correctly identified metastases to liver, lungs, nodes and adrenal glands. | |
| Cohen et al. [ | 2018 | Retrospective, | Staging uveal melanoma | PET/CT combined with abdominal ultrasonography resulted positive for metastases in 3 cases of uveal melanoma and identified a second primary malignancy in the 9% of the examined subjects. |
Summary of main studies on 18F-FDG PET/CT for response assessment to targeted therapy in BRAF-mutated MM.
| Authors | Year | Clinical Setting | N. of Patients | Applied Criteria | Comments |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| McArthur et al. [ | 2012 | Part of a phase I clinical trial | EORTC | 18F-FDG PET/CT can be applied to assess response to vemurafenib; metabolic response is correlated with a trend towards a longer survival. | |
| Carlino et al. [ | 2013 | Part of a phase I clinical trial | EORTC | Metabolic response to BRAF-inhibitor, categorized as homogeneous or heterogeneous through PET/CT, correlated with time-to-progression in patients with BRAF-mutated MM treated with dabrafenib. | |
| Schmitt et al. [ | 2016 | Retrospective, | EORTC | In patients undergoing combined anti BRAF/MEK therapy, change in SUVmax for the least responsive site of disease resulted associated with progression free survival. | |
| Annovazzi et al. [ | 2021 | Retrospective, | EORTC | Baseline MTV and complete metabolic response during BRAF/MEK therapy are predictors of OS in BRAF-mutated melanoma submitted to targeted therapy. |
Figure 1A 62-year-old male, previously submitted to excision of nodular cutaneous melanoma (Breslow thickness of 8 mm, Clark level IV, stage pT4a), performed 18F-FDG PET/CT for staging before therapy. (A) MIP image showed areas of increased tracer incorporation in the left lung (black arrow) and adrenal gland (black bordered arrow). Molecular analysis was positive for BRAF V600e mutation and he started combination of BRAF and MEK inhibitors (dabrafenib plus trametinib). PET/CT MIP (B) performed after 3 months showed metabolic response to therapy. Fused corresponding PET/CT axial of the abdominal region (C) demonstrated almost complete regression of the non-homogenously hypermetabolic lesion in the left adrenal gland when baseline (upper row, arrow) is compared with follow-up PET/CT scan (lower row, arrow). Fused PET/CT axial of the lung (D) demonstrated regression of the hyperactive nodule in the left lung when baseline (upper row, arrow) is compared with follow-up scan (lower row, arrow).
Figure 2A 74-year-old male, previously submitted to excision of nodular cutaneous melanoma of the right foot (Breslow thickness of 8 mm, Clark level IV, stage pT4a), performed 18F-FDG PET/CT before the start adjuvant immunotherapy. (A) MIP image showed physiological tracer biodistribution, with no evidence of pathological accumulation. PET/CT MIP (B) performed after 3 months of PD-1 blocker (nivolumab) depicted the appearance of an area of increased tracer accumulation in the left iliac fossa (black arrow). (C) Fused corresponding PET/CT axial (upper row) and coronal (lower row) of the abdominal region demonstrated the onset of a hypermetabolic nodule next to the abdominal wall, suspected to be peritoneal localization (white arrow). The pattern was interpreted according to PERCIMT criteria (i.e., pseudo-progression) and the patient continued immune check-point inhibitor. A further PET/CT MIP (D) after 6 weeks demonstrated complete spontaneous regression of the area of increased 18F-FDG accumulation in the left iliac fossa (black arrow), thus confirming the diagnosis of pseudo-progression.
Figure 3A case of hyper-progression during immunotherapy. A 41-year-old male, affected by non-melanoma skin cancer (locally advanced cutaneous squamous cell carcinoma) of the left thigh, submitted to anti PD-1 immunotherapy (cemiplimab). 18F-FDG PET/CT before the start of therapy: (A) MIP image showed pathological tracer accumulation within a left inguinal node (black arrow). PET/CT MIP (B) performed after 2 months of PD-1 blocker depicted an impressive disease progression at nodal and cutaneous level (black arrow). (C) Fused corresponding PET/CT axial (upper row) acquired before therapy well demonstrated a hypermetabolic inguinal node (white arrow), fused PET/CT after 2 months of PD-1 blocker showed meaningful enlargement of the metastatic node (white arrow). Immunotherapy was discontinued, the patient was switched to chemotherapy but deceased after 3 months.
Main metabolic criteria applied for the assessment of response to immunotherapy in skin cancer.
| Authors | Year | Criteria | CMR | PMR | PMD | SMD |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Wahl et al. [ | 2009 | PERCIST | Complete regression of all 18F-FDG-avid sites | SULpeak reduction in at least 30% in the target lesions | Increase in SULpeak of at least 30% or new lesions | None of the previously mentioned conditions |
| Sachpekidis et al. [ | 2015 | EORTC | Complete regression of all 18F-FDG-avid sites | Minimum reduction of ±15–25% in SUV after the 1st cycle of chemotherapy, and >25% after more than one cycle | Increased SUVmax of ≥25% or appearance of new lesions | None of the previously mentioned conditions |
| Anwar et al. [ | 2018 | PERCIMT | No new lesions | No new lesions | >4 new lesions with functional DM <1 cm, or three new lesions with functional | None of the previously mentioned conditions |
| Goldfarb et al. [ | 2019 | iPERCIST | Complete regression of all 18F-FDG-avid sites | SULpeak reduction of at least 30% in the target lesions | Increase in SULpeak of at least 30% or new lesions (unconfirmed progressive disease/UPMD), needing confirmation (cPMD) with a further scan after 4–8 weeks. | None of the previously mentioned conditions |
| Ito et al. [ | 2019 | Immunotherapy-modified | Complete regression of all 18F-FDG-avid sites | Sum of SULpeak decreased by at least 30% | Increase in the sum of SULpeak by at least 30% | None of the previously mentioned conditions |
Summary of main studies on 18F-FDG PET/CT for response assessment to immunotherapy with ICIs in MM.
| Authors | Year | Therapy | N. of Patients | Applied Criteria | Comments |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sachpekidis et al. [ | 2015 | Ipilumumab | EORTC | Metabolic response to ipilimumab assessed by PET/CT correlates with survival benefit. EORTC might erroneously classify patients presenting pseudo-progression at early (i.e., after 2 cycles) PET/CT scan. | |
| Anwar et al. [ | 2018 | Ipilumumab | PERCIMT | The number of newly emerged lesions and their functional diameter resulted significant predictors of patients’ outcome (clinical versus no-clinical benefit). | |
| Sachpekidis et al. [ | 2018 | Ipilumumab | PERCIMT vs | Analysis of dynamic PET/CT acquired at different time-points (baseline, after 2 cycles and after 4 cycles) does not correlated with final outcome after immunotherapy | |
| Ito et al. [ | 2019 | Ipilumumab | imPERCIST5 | Change in SULpeak, measured in up to 5 lesions, between baseline and post-treatment scan meaningfully predicts the outcome after immunotherapy. | |
| Sachpekidis et al. [ | 2019 | Vemurafenib plus ipilimumab | EORTC vs | PERCIMT outperformed EORTC criteria for assessing response to combined targeted therapy and immunotherapy in BRAF-mutated MM. | |
| Sanli et al. [ | 2019 | Ipilimumab, nivolumab | PET-parameters correlation with OS | Tumor heterogeneity (TH) index was inversely correlated with SUVmax, SUVpeak, TLG and MTV, while it was a meaningful predictor of patients’ survival. | |
| Nobashi et al. [ | 2019 | Ipilimumab, pembrolizumab, nivolumab | Correlation | Patients responding to immunotherapy showed a decrease in tumors’ SUVmax between baseline and follow-up scan, while complete response was associated with increased SUVmax in thyroid. | |
| Seban et al. [ | 2019 | PD-1 bockers | PET-parameters correlation with survival | High MTV and activation of lymphoid organs at baseline represent unfavorable prognostic factors in patients undergoing anti PD-1 therapy. | |
| Iravani et al. [ | 2020 | Nivolumab plus ipilimumab | PERCIST | Metabolic response correlates with survival benefit in patients submitted to ICIs. PET/CT scan is a valuable tool for the image of irAEs. | |
| Annovazzi et al. [ | 2020 | Nivolumab or ipilumumab | PERCIMT, EORTC, RECIST 1.1, TLG, MTV | For patients treated with CTLA-4 targeting immunotherapy a combination of PERCIMT and MTV resulted the best approach for response assessment. In case of anti PD-1 therapy, the best results were achieved with EORTC, MTV and TLG. | |
| Schank et al. [ | 2021 | Nivolumab, pembrolizumab, ipilumumab | EORTC, PERCIMT | Patients achieving complete metabolic response during immunotherapy have good prognosis, even in case of treatment discontinuation. | |
| Dimitriou et al. [ | 2022 | Nivolumab, pembrolizumab, | EORTC, RECIST | A complete metabolic response before ICIs discontinuation, assessed according to EORTC, predicted long-term outcome and outperformed RECIST criteria as prognostic factor. | |
| Ferdinandus et al. [ | 2022 | Nivolumab, pembrolizumab, | RECIST 1.1, EORTC/PERCIST for CMR definition | CMR to immunotherapy has a prognostic impact on long-term response after treatment discontinuation | |
| Ellebaek et al. [ | 2022 | PD-1 targeting immunotherpy | CMR according to | The absence of 18F-FDG-avid lesions at the time of immunotherapy discontinuation is a powerful prognostic factor on long-term response. |
Figure 4A case of irAEs. A 41-year-old female, previously submitted to excision of a nodular, high-risk MM, started adjuvant immunotherapy with nivolumab. After 4 cycles, she presented mild fatigue and grade 1 hyponatremia and orthostatic hypotension, with reduced level of morning cortisol. 18F-FDG PET/CT performed after symptoms’ onset (A) demonstrated bilateral increased tracer accumulation within adrenal glands (white arrows), compatible with the suspicion of immune-related adrenalitis, she discontinued immunotherapy and started on steroid therapy with excellent clinical response. PET/CT, acquired after steroid therapy and symptoms’ regression (B), revealed complete regression of the adrenal glands’ hypermetabolism. After multidisciplinary consensus meeting, immunotherapy was restarted, and no further complications were registered.