Radioembolization and the Dynamic Role of 90Y PET/CT

Before the advent of tomographic imaging, it was postulated that decay of 90  Y to the 0 + excited state of 90 Zr may result in emission of a positron–electron pair. While the branching ratio for pair-production is small (~32 × 10 −6 ), PET has been successfully used to image 90  Y in numerous recen...

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Veröffentlicht in:Frontiers in oncology 2014-02, Vol.4
Hauptverfasser: Pasciak, Alexander S., Bourgeois, Austin C., McKinney, J. Mark, Chang, Ted T., Osborne, Dustin R., Acuff, Shelley N., Bradley, Yong C.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Before the advent of tomographic imaging, it was postulated that decay of 90  Y to the 0 + excited state of 90 Zr may result in emission of a positron–electron pair. While the branching ratio for pair-production is small (~32 × 10 −6 ), PET has been successfully used to image 90  Y in numerous recent patients and phantom studies. 90  Y PET imaging has been performed on a variety of PET/CT systems, with and without time-of-flight (TOF) and/or resolution recovery capabilities as well as on both bismuth-germanate and lutetium yttrium orthosilicate (LYSO)-based scanners. On all systems, resolution and contrast superior to bremsstrahlung SPECT has been reported. The intrinsic radioactivity present in LYSO-based PET scanners is a potential limitation associated with accurate quantification of 90  Y. However, intrinsic radioactivity has been shown to have a negligible effect at the high activity concentrations common in 90  Y radioembolization. Accurate quantification is possible on a variety of PET scanner models, with or without TOF, although TOF improves accuracy at lower activity concentrations. Quantitative 90  Y PET images can be transformed into 3-dimensional (3D) maps of absorbed dose based on the premise that the 90  Y activity distribution does not change after infusion. This transformation has been accomplished in several ways, although the most common is with the use of 3D dose-point-kernel convolution. From a clinical standpoint, 90  Y PET provides a superior post-infusion evaluation of treatment technical success owing to its improved resolution. Absorbed dose maps generated from quantitative PET data can be used to predict treatment efficacy and manage patient follow-up. For patients who receive multiple treatments, this information can also be used to provide patient-specific treatment-planning for successive therapies, potentially improving response. The broad utilization of 90  Y PET has the potential to provide a wealth of dose–response information, which may lead to development of improved radioembolization treatment-planning models in the future.
ISSN:2234-943X
2234-943X
DOI:10.3389/fonc.2014.00038