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FDG IMAGING: WHAT TECHNOLOGISTS NEED TO KNOW

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FDG PET in Lung Cancer. Uptake (SUV) in the primary mass correlates with median survival ... Staging Lung Cancer (NEJM 2003;348:2500) ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: FDG IMAGING: WHAT TECHNOLOGISTS NEED TO KNOW


1
OVERVIEW OF PET
R. Edward Coleman, M.D.
2
Outline of Presentation
  • Description of PET
  • Patient preparation / imaging
  • Reimbursement
  • Clinical studies oncology
  • Dementia

3
PET
  • Molecular imaging
  • Primary modality for molecular medicine
  • Research / animal PET

4
Positron Emitting Radionuclides
  • Cyclotron Produced Generator Produced
  • F-18 110 mins Ga-68 68 minsC-11 20
    mins Rb-82 76 secsN-13 10 mins
  • O-15 2 mins

5
Positron Annihilation
511 keV
511 keV
6
Coincidence
7
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8
F-18 FDG
CH2OH
O
OH
OH
HO
18F
DGlucose
2Fluoro2DeoxyDGlucose
9
FDG
  • F-18 (cyclotron produced) has 110 min half-life
  • FDG readily available commercially at most sites
  • Synthesis units make large quantities reproducibly

10
FDG
  • Competes with serum glucose for accumulation
  • After phosphorylated, metabolically trapped
    except in liver where it is dephosphorylated
  • Tumors have increased concentrations of glucose
    transporter proteins and/or hexokinase enzymes

11
Patient Preparation
  • Goal is to have low serum glucose and insulin
    levels
  • Should be without caloric intake (encourage to
    drink water) for 4 hrs
  • Can take medications
  • Obtain routine serum glucose

12
Imaging
  • Minimum time delay from FDG administration Brain
    - 30 min Whole-body - 45 min
  • Brain imaging 1 min acquisition for
    positioning 3D acquisition for 8
    mins calculated attenuation correction

13
Imaging
  • Whole body imaging
  • 5-7 bed positions
  • 4 min. emission, 2.5 min. transmission per bed
    position

14
PET Reimbursement
  • Complex, evolving process
  • Dependent on FDA approval of drugs
    Facilitated by FDAMA (1997)
  • Reimbursable indications Determined by
    technology assessment panels of third party
    payers Process dominated by CMS

15
Medicare Reimbursement
  • Hospitals paid under HOPPS/APC rules
  • Reimbursement for others set by local carrier
  • G codes used for billing instead of CPT codes
  • Effective April 2002, APC technical payment for
    whole-body PET set at 1850 (including FDG)
  • Professional reimbursement remains at 80
  • vs. 186 for CT of chest, abdomen, pelvis
  • vs. 165 for gated myocardial SPECT

16
Non-Oncologic PETMedicare Coverage
  • Rb-82 myocardial perfusion
  • FDG refractory seizure disorder myocardial
    viability assessment under review dementia
  • N-13 ammonia myocardial perfusion

17
Oncologic PETMedicare Coverage
  • Diagnosis, staging and restaging
  • Non-small cell lung cancer
  • Colorectal cancer
  • Esophageal cancer
  • Head and Neck cancer
  • Lymphoma
  • Melanoma

18
Oncologic PETMedicare Coverage
  • Staging, restaging and treatment monitoring of
    breast cancer
  • Thyroid cancer after therapy, TG elevated, I-131
    scan negative

19
Cancers Submitted for Coverage
  • Brain tumor
  • Cervical cancer
  • Small cell lung cancer
  • Testicular cancer
  • Pancreatic cancer

20
Cancers Submitted for Coverage
  • Ovarian cancer
  • GIST
  • Aggressive prostate cancer
  • Multiple myeloma

21
PET Scans by Type
22
Clinical Indications 2002
  • Lung 1024
  • Lymphoma 542
  • Melanoma 272
  • Colorectal 244
  • Breast 158
  • Head Neck 83
  • Esophagus 74

23
Clinical Indications 2002
  • Brain tumor 570
  • Seizure 62
  • Other 25

24
Solitary Pulmonary Nodule
25
FDG-PET Meta-analysis in Pulmonary Nodules
  • Studies performed between 1996 and 2000
  • 1474 focal pulmonary lesions
  • Maximum joint sensitivity and specificity 91.2
  • Sensitivity 96.8, Specificity 77.8

Gould et al JAMA 2001285914-24
26
FDG-PET as a Metabolic Biopsy
  • 63 lung lesions - biopsy unsuccessful or too
    dangerous
  • PPV 90 NPV 100 (visual analysis)
  • False positive results 2 with mycobacteria
    infection, 3 resolved over 12 months
  • Hain et al. Eur J Nucl Med 2001 281336-1340

27
FDG PET in Lung Cancer
  • Uptake (SUV) in the primary mass correlates with
    median survival
  • SUV
  • SUV 10 11.4 months
  • SUV 10, SPN 3 cm 5.7 month
  • Ahuja et al. Cancer 1998 83918

28
NSCLC - Staging
29
Mediastinal Staging Meta-analysis
  • Included 14 PET studies of 514 pts and 29 CT
    studies of 2226 pts
  • PET Sensitivity79, Specificity91
  • CT Sensitivity60, Specificity77
  • Dwamena et al. Radiology 1999213503-506

30
Effectiveness of PET in Preoperative Assessment
of Patients with Suspected NSCLCThe PLUS
Multi-center Trial
  • 188 patients with NSCLC randomized to
    conventional work-up (CWU) ? PET
  • Endpoint futile thoracotomy
  • benign disease
  • exploratory thoracotomy only
  • IIIA (N2) or IIIB disease
  • relapse or death within 12 months
  • CWU (n96) 41 futile thoractomiesCWU PET
    (n92) 21 futile thoracotomiesRelative
    reduction 51 p0.003

van Tinteren et al., Lancet 2002 3591388
31
The PLUS Multi-center Trial
  • CWU (n96) CWU PET (n92)
  • No thoracotomy 18 (19) 32 (35)
  • Confirmed N2/N3 10 18
  • Confirmed distant metastases 1 7
  • Benign primary lesion 2 3
  • Other tumor 2 1
  • Intercurrent disease/refused 3 3
  • Non-futile thoracotomy 39 (41) 41
    (44)
  • Futile thoracotomy 39 (41) 19 (21)
  • Benign 7 2
  • Exploratory thoracotomy 1 1
  • IIIA (N2) 6 4
  • IIIB 6 2
  • Recurrence/death

van Tinteren et al., Lancet 2002 3591388
32
Esophageal Cancer
Pre Therapy Post Therapy
33
Villous Adenoma
34
Colorectal Cancer
35
Hepatic Metastases
36
Detection of Hepatic Metastases from Cancers of
the GI Tract Meta-Analysis
  • Used 111 data sets 9 US, 25 CT, 11 MRI, 9 PET
  • At a specificity higher than 85Modality Mean
    wt sens (CI) US 55 (41, 65) CT 72 (63,
    80) MRI 76 (57, 91) PET 90 (80,
    97)

Kinkel et al Radiology 2002 24748-756
37
Hodgkin Lymphoma
12/11/01
4/10/02
38
Gleevec Therapy in GIST Dana-Farber Cancer
Institute
Baseline 24 hours 7 days
2 months 5.5 months
39
Breast Cancer
40
Change FDG-SUV Responders (n21) and
Non-Responders (n19)
With cutoff change ? 10 PPV 91 NPV 94 for
predicting response
Percent Change in SUV for FDG
Responders
Non-responders
41
Improving the Performance of PET Scanners
  • Accelerating pace of technical innovation
  • New scintillation crystals
  • Lutetium oxyorthosilicate (LSO) Lu2SiO5(Ce)
  • Gadolinium oxyorthosilicate (GSO) Gd2SiO5(Ce)
  • Higher light output and shorter decay time than
    BGO
  • Improved NEC reduced scanning time
  • New BGO detector design
  • More sensitive
  • Faster patient throughput

42
PET/CT
43
PET / CT
  • Patient dosing of FDG
  • 140 uCi / kg (10 20 mCi)
  • Patient imaging
  • Scout view obtained
  • CT from external auditory meatus to prox thigh
  • PET scan acquisition
  • 150 lbs 3 min / bed position

44
Advantages of PET/CT
  • Shorter scan time
  • More accurate attenuation correction better
    images
  • Anatomic fusion

45
Small Cell Lung CA
46
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47
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48
Integrated PET and CT in Staging Lung Cancer
(NEJM 20033482500)
  • Prospective study of 50 patients with proven or
    suspected NSCLC
  • Evaluated PET and CT alone, visually correlated
    PET and CT, and integrated PET-CT for TNM staging
  • Histology adeno ca (28), SCC (13), large cell
    (8), MALT (1-excluded)

49
Integrated PET and CT in Staging Lung Cancer
(NEJM 20033482500)
  • PET/CT provided additional information in 20/49
    patients
  • Exact location of lymph nodes (9)
  • Precise evaluation of chest wall (3) and
    mediastinal (3) invasion
  • Differentiation between tumor and inflammation
    (7)
  • Exact location of distant metastases (2)
  • PET/ CT significantly more accurate than others
    for tumor staging and than PET for nodal staging.

50
Wholebody PET/CT and MRI for Tumor
Staging(Antoch, Essen, Submitted)
  • Studied 98 patients with various malignancies.
  • PET/CT correctly TNM staged 75/98 (77) pts.
  • MRI correctly TNM staged 53/98 (54) pts.
  • Impact on patient management PET/CT12, MRI2

51
Wholebody PET/CT and MRI for Tumor
Staging(Antoch, Essen, Submitted)
  • Accuracy
  • PET/CT MRI
  • T stage 34/46 (80) 24/46 (52)
  • N stage 91/98 (93) 77/98 (79)
  • M stage 92/98 (94) 91/98 (93)

52
Colorectal CA
53
Squamous Cell CA
54
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55
PET in Alzheimers Disease
  • Request for coverage
  • distinguish patients with AD from other causes
    of dementia, or assist with early diagnosis in
    patients with suspected neurodegenerative disease

56
Criteria for PET in Dementia
  • Progressive decline in cognitive domain and/or
    cognitive impairment (change from baseline)
    present for at least 6 months
  • Not suffering from severe dementia
  • Making a diagnosis will impact care

57
Dementia
  • Affects 8 of persons 65 years
  • Affects 47 of persons 85 years
  • Alzheimers disease accounts for 70

58
Rationale for Early Diagnosis of AD
  • Cholinesterase inhibitors delay decline in memory
    and cognitive function (9-12 months) and need for
    institutionalization (18 months)
  • Better planning for future - delays nursing home
    placement an average of 11 months

59
Conventional Workup of Dementia
  • Lim et al (J Am Geriatr Soc 1999 47564-9)
    evaluated 134 patients with new onset of symptoms
    - diagnosis based on follow-up of 3 years.

60
Conventional Workup of Dementia
  • 94 AD, 40 non-AD
  • Sens Spec
  • Prob AD 83 55
  • Prob Poss AD 85 50

61
Anatomic Imaging in Dementia
  • CT and/or MRI detects unsuspected lesions
    (strokes and tumors) in approximately 5 of
    patients
  • In a 7 center study, less than 30 of patients
    diagnosed as vascular dementia actually had
    isolated cerebrovascular disease and 55 had AD
    on pathological diagnosis (Am J Psychiatr 1995
    1521476-1484)

62
PET in Dementia
  • Pattern of decreased FDG in AD in parietotemporal
    cortex sparing basal ganglia, thalamus,
    cerebellum, brainstem and cortical regions
    mediating sensory and motor functions.
  • Extent of hypometabolism correlates with severity
    of cognitive impairment
  • May be unilateral early, more symmetric as
    disease progresses

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67
PET and Neuropathologic Correlation
  • Study N Sens Spec
  • Hoffman (J Nucl Med) 22 88 67
  • Multicenter study (JAMA) 138 94 73

68
PET
  • PET assesses physiology and biochemistry, rather
    than anatomy
  • Thus provides
  • a different perspective on disease(characterizati
    on of biology)
  • earlier, more sensitive detection of disease

69
PET / CT
  • Combines chemistry and anatomy
  • Provides more diagnostic information than either
    modality by itself
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