Flare Phenomenon in O -(2- 18 F-Fluoroethyl)-l-Tyrosine PET After Resection of Gliomas
PET using -(2- F-fluoroethyl)-l-tyrosine ( F-FET) is useful to detect residual tumor tissue after glioma resection. Recent animal experiments detected reactive changes in F-FET uptake at the rim of the resection cavity within the first 2 wk after resection of gliomas. In the present study, we evalua...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Journal of Nuclear Medicine 2020-09, Vol.61 (9), p.1294-1299 |
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Zusammenfassung: | PET using
-(2-
F-fluoroethyl)-l-tyrosine (
F-FET) is useful to detect residual tumor tissue after glioma resection. Recent animal experiments detected reactive changes in
F-FET uptake at the rim of the resection cavity within the first 2 wk after resection of gliomas. In the present study, we evaluated pre- and postoperative
F-FET PET scans of glioma patients with particular emphasis on the identification of reactive changes after surgery.
Forty-three patients with cerebral gliomas (9 low-grade, 34 high-grade; 9 primary tumors, 34 recurrent tumors) who had preoperative (time before surgery: median, 23 d; range, 6-44 d) and postoperative
F-FET PET (time after surgery: median, 14 d; range, 5-28 d) were included. PET scans (20-40 min after injection) were evaluated visually for complete or incomplete resection and compared with MRI. Changes in
F-FET uptake were evaluated by tumor-to-brain ratios in residual tumor and by maximum lesion-to-brain ratios near the resection cavity.
Visual analysis of
F-FET PET scans revealed complete resection in 16 of 43 patients and incomplete resection in the remaining patients. PET results were concordant with MRI in 69% of the patients. The maximum lesion-to-brain ratio for
F-FET uptake near the resection cavity was significantly higher than preoperative values (1.59 ± 0.36 vs. 1.14 ± 0.17;
= 43;
< 0.001). In 11 patients (26%), a flare phenomenon was observed, with a considerable increase in
F-FET uptake compared with preoperative values in either the residual tumor (
= 5) or areas remote from the tumor on the preoperative PET scan (
= 6) (2.92 ± 1.24 vs. 1.62 ± 0.75;
< 0.001). Further follow-up in 5 patients showed decreasing
F-FET uptake in the flare areas in 4 patients and progress in 1 patient.
Our study confirmed that
F-FET PET provides valuable information for assessing the success of glioma resection. Postoperative reactive changes at the rim of the resection cavity appear to be mild. However, in 23% of the patients, a postoperative flare phenomenon was observed that warrants further investigation. |
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ISSN: | 0161-5505 1535-5667 2159-662X |
DOI: | 10.2967/jnumed.119.238568 |