Early Dynamic PET/CT and 18F-FDG Blood Flow Imaging in Bladder Cancer Detection
Autor: | Suresh Lakhanpal, Chirag Jani, Clifford Church, Sam Belakhlef |
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Rok vydání: | 2012 |
Předmět: |
Male
medicine.medical_specialty Time Factors Perfusion Imaging Urine Multimodal Imaging Fluorodeoxyglucose F18 medicine Humans Radiology Nuclear Medicine and imaging Aged Retrospective Studies PET-CT Bladder cancer Urinary bladder business.industry Cancer Biological Transport General Medicine Blood flow Gold standard (test) medicine.disease medicine.anatomical_structure Urinary Bladder Neoplasms Positron-Emission Tomography Linear Models Radiology Tomography X-Ray Computed Nuclear medicine business Blood vessel |
Zdroj: | Clinical Nuclear Medicine. 37:366-368 |
ISSN: | 0363-9762 |
DOI: | 10.1097/rlu.0b013e3182443110 |
Popis: | BACKGROUND The standard PET/CT and 18F-FDG scanning protocols for patients with cancer call for data acquisitions to start 50 to 60 minutes postinjection (PI) of the radiopharmaceutical. This prolonged incubation period allows the concentration of high activity tracer to accumulate in the urinary bladder rendering identification of bladder lesions very difficult, if not impossible. The objective of this study was to identify bladder cancer using a novel PET/CT and 18F-FDG scanning protocol that takes advantage of the angiogenesis observed in malignancies and the kidneys' physiology of delayed excretion of 18F-FDG into the urinary bladder. METHODS Early dynamic PET/CT and 18F-FDG scans were performed on 7 consecutive male patients with pathology-confirmed bladder cancer. A series of 5 dynamic scans of 2 minutes each, starting at injection time, were obtained on each patient's urinary bladder. Areas of increased 18F-FDG blood flow to the bladder walls were considered suspicious for cancer. RESULTS Using pathologic report as the gold standard, this new protocol resulted in 5 true positives, 1 true negative, and 1 false positive. The average maximum standard uptake values (SUVmax ± SD), at 2 to 4 minutes postinjection, of bladder wall areas with increased and normal blood flow were 2.7 ± 0.7 and 1.1 ± 1.3 g/mL, respectively. Also, the average activity concentration ratios (tumor/blood vessel) of suspected cancerous regions versus time showed a linear pattern with a slope of 2.9. CONCLUSION Early dynamic FDG PET images can demonstrate bladder lesions that are obscured by urine activity on routine images at 1 hour. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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