FAPI PET uptake patterns after invasive medical interventions: a single center retrospective analysis

Purpose Fibroblast activation protein (FAP)-inhibitor (FAPI)-PET tracers allow imaging of the FAP-expressing cancer associated fibroblasts (CAF) and also the normal activated fibroblasts (NAF) involved in inflammation/fibrosis that may be present after invasive medical interventions. We evaluated [6...

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Veröffentlicht in:European journal of nuclear medicine and molecular imaging 2024-09, Vol.51 (11), p.3373-3385
Hauptverfasser: Maliha, Peter George, Hotta, Masatoshi, Farolfi, Andrea, Grogan, Tristan, Alano, Rejah, Limon, Andrea, Lam, Ethan, Carlucci, Giuseppe, Bahri, Shadfar, Salavati, Ali, Benz, Matthias, Silverman, Daniel, Gupta, Pawan, Quon, Andrew, Allen-Auerbach, Martin, Czernin, Johannes, Calais, Jeremie
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Purpose Fibroblast activation protein (FAP)-inhibitor (FAPI)-PET tracers allow imaging of the FAP-expressing cancer associated fibroblasts (CAF) and also the normal activated fibroblasts (NAF) involved in inflammation/fibrosis that may be present after invasive medical interventions. We evaluated [68Ga]Ga-FAPI-46 uptake patterns post-medical/invasive non-systemic interventions. Methods This single-center retrospective analysis was conducted in 79 consecutive patients who underwent [ 68 Ga]Ga-FAPI-46 PET/CT. Investigators reviewed prior patient medical/invasive interventions (surgery, endoscopy, biopsy, radiotherapy, foreign body placement (FBP) defined as implanted medical/surgical material present at time of scan) and characterized the anatomically corresponding FAPI uptake intensity both visually (positive if above surrounding background) and quantitatively (SUVmax). Interventions with missing data/images or confounders of [ 68 Ga]Ga-FAPI-46 uptake (partial volume effect, other cause of increased uptake) were excluded. Available correlative FDG, DOTATATE and PSMA PET/CTs were analyzed when available. Results 163 medical/invasive interventions (mostly surgeries (49%), endoscopies (18%) and non-surgical biopsies (10%)) in 60 subjects were included for analysis. 43/163 (26%) involved FBP. FAPI uptake occurred in 24/163 (15%) of interventions (average SUVmax 3.2 (mild), range 1.5–5.1). The median time-interval post-intervention to FAPI-PET was 47.5 months and was shorter when FAPI uptake was present (median 9.5 months) than when absent (median 60.1 months; p  = 0.001). Cut-off time beyond which no FAPI uptake would be present post-intervention without FBP was 8.2 months, with a sensitivity, specificity, positive predictive value and negative predictive value of 82, 90, 99 and 31% respectively. No optimal cutoff point could be determined when considering interventions with FBP. No significant difference was detected between frequency of [ 68 Ga]Ga-FAPI-46 and [ 18 F]FDG uptake in intervention sites. Compared to [ 68 Ga]Ga-PSMA-11, [ 68 Ga]Ga-FAPI-46 revealed more frequent and intense post-interventional tracer uptake. Conclusion [ 68 Ga]Ga-FAPI-46 uptake from medical/invasive interventions without FBP appears to be time dependent, nearly always absent beyond 8 months post-intervention, but frequently present for years with FBP.
ISSN:1619-7070
1619-7089
1619-7089
DOI:10.1007/s00259-024-06733-7