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Positron Emission Tomography in Clinical Oncology Chun Ki Kim, M.D. Chun Ki Kim, M.D. Mount Sinai School of Medicine Mount Sinai School of Medicine New York, New York New York, New York

Positron Emission Tomography in Clinical Oncology Chun Ki Kim, M.D. Mount Sinai School of Medicine New York, New York

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Page 1: Positron Emission Tomography in Clinical Oncology Chun Ki Kim, M.D. Mount Sinai School of Medicine New York, New York

Positron Emission Tomography

in Clinical Oncology

Chun Ki Kim, M.D.Chun Ki Kim, M.D.

Mount Sinai School of MedicineMount Sinai School of Medicine

New York, New YorkNew York, New York

Page 2: Positron Emission Tomography in Clinical Oncology Chun Ki Kim, M.D. Mount Sinai School of Medicine New York, New York
Page 3: Positron Emission Tomography in Clinical Oncology Chun Ki Kim, M.D. Mount Sinai School of Medicine New York, New York
Page 4: Positron Emission Tomography in Clinical Oncology Chun Ki Kim, M.D. Mount Sinai School of Medicine New York, New York

Commonly used PET Radiotracers

• [F-18] FDG - Glucose metabolism

• [C-11] Methionine - Amino acid transport- Incorporation of amino acid into protein fractions

• [O-15] Water - Blood flow• [N-13] Ammonia - Blood flow• Rb-82 - Blood flow

Page 5: Positron Emission Tomography in Clinical Oncology Chun Ki Kim, M.D. Mount Sinai School of Medicine New York, New York

• [C-11] Thymidine Tumor cellular proliferation rate• [C-11] Aminoisobutyric acid Tumor amino acid uptake• [F-18] 5-FU Prediction/evaluation of

ChemoTx• [C-11] Tyrosine Tumor metabolism• [N-13] Glutamate Tumor metabolism

• [C-11] Acetate Myocardial oxidative metabolism• [C-11] Palmitate Myocardial fatty acid metabolism

• [F-18] FluoroDOPA Dopamine synthesis• Many other receptor agents Dopamine, serotonin, opiate etc.

Potential PET Radiotracers

Page 6: Positron Emission Tomography in Clinical Oncology Chun Ki Kim, M.D. Mount Sinai School of Medicine New York, New York

PET Radiotracer approved by FDA

• [F-18] FDG (fluoro deoxyglucose)

Malignancy ~ Glucose / FDG uptake

Page 7: Positron Emission Tomography in Clinical Oncology Chun Ki Kim, M.D. Mount Sinai School of Medicine New York, New York
Page 8: Positron Emission Tomography in Clinical Oncology Chun Ki Kim, M.D. Mount Sinai School of Medicine New York, New York

NORMAL TUMOR

• Overexpression of Glucose transporters• Higher levels of Hexokinase• Down-regulation of Glucose-6-phosphatase• Anaerobic glycolysis, less ATP per glucose molecule, more glucose molecules needed for ATP production• General increase in metabolism from high growth rates

Page 9: Positron Emission Tomography in Clinical Oncology Chun Ki Kim, M.D. Mount Sinai School of Medicine New York, New York

Malignancy

Glucose/FDG uptake

Page 10: Positron Emission Tomography in Clinical Oncology Chun Ki Kim, M.D. Mount Sinai School of Medicine New York, New York

Gallium PET

Page 11: Positron Emission Tomography in Clinical Oncology Chun Ki Kim, M.D. Mount Sinai School of Medicine New York, New York

Metastatic Thyroid Ca. to Lung, Mediastinum, and Skeleton

Page 12: Positron Emission Tomography in Clinical Oncology Chun Ki Kim, M.D. Mount Sinai School of Medicine New York, New York
Page 13: Positron Emission Tomography in Clinical Oncology Chun Ki Kim, M.D. Mount Sinai School of Medicine New York, New York

General Indications for FDG-PET Tumor Imaging

DDx: Benign versus Malignant Staging & Restaging Metastatic work up: Rising tumor markers Monitoring treatment response Scar/necrosis/fibrosis vs. Recurrent/residual disease Grading/Prognosis Detection of unknown primary

Page 14: Positron Emission Tomography in Clinical Oncology Chun Ki Kim, M.D. Mount Sinai School of Medicine New York, New York

New Medicare Coverage Policy for FDG PET

• Lung Ca (NSC): Dx, Staging & restaging• Esophgeal Ca: Dx, Staging & restaging• Colorectal Ca: Dx, Staging & restaging• Lymphoma: Dx, Staging & restaging• Melanoma: Dx, Staging & restaging,

Non-covered for evaluating regional nodes• Head & Neck Ca: Dx, Staging & restaging

Page 15: Positron Emission Tomography in Clinical Oncology Chun Ki Kim, M.D. Mount Sinai School of Medicine New York, New York

Lung Cancer

Dx: Solitary Pulmonary NoduleStagingMetastatic work-up

Page 16: Positron Emission Tomography in Clinical Oncology Chun Ki Kim, M.D. Mount Sinai School of Medicine New York, New York

Solitary Pulmonary Nodule

• Incidence detected by CXR: 130,000/year.

50-60%: Benign

20-40%: Invasive nodule biopsy

Resection.

Page 17: Positron Emission Tomography in Clinical Oncology Chun Ki Kim, M.D. Mount Sinai School of Medicine New York, New York

CT: an indeterminant LUL nodule.

Page 18: Positron Emission Tomography in Clinical Oncology Chun Ki Kim, M.D. Mount Sinai School of Medicine New York, New York
Page 19: Positron Emission Tomography in Clinical Oncology Chun Ki Kim, M.D. Mount Sinai School of Medicine New York, New York

Efficacy of PET Solitary Pulmonary Nodule

• Sensitivity = 97%• Specificity = 78%

(Meta-analysis of >40 articles: Gould et al. JAMA 2001)

Page 20: Positron Emission Tomography in Clinical Oncology Chun Ki Kim, M.D. Mount Sinai School of Medicine New York, New York

False Positives:

Active Infection/Inflammation

TB

PneumoniaCryptococcosisHistoplasmosis

AspergillosisInflammatory

Page 21: Positron Emission Tomography in Clinical Oncology Chun Ki Kim, M.D. Mount Sinai School of Medicine New York, New York

Staging

Page 22: Positron Emission Tomography in Clinical Oncology Chun Ki Kim, M.D. Mount Sinai School of Medicine New York, New York
Page 23: Positron Emission Tomography in Clinical Oncology Chun Ki Kim, M.D. Mount Sinai School of Medicine New York, New York
Page 24: Positron Emission Tomography in Clinical Oncology Chun Ki Kim, M.D. Mount Sinai School of Medicine New York, New York

60/M: Lung Ca.

Page 25: Positron Emission Tomography in Clinical Oncology Chun Ki Kim, M.D. Mount Sinai School of Medicine New York, New York

62y/o Lung Ca. with adrenal mass

Page 26: Positron Emission Tomography in Clinical Oncology Chun Ki Kim, M.D. Mount Sinai School of Medicine New York, New York
Page 27: Positron Emission Tomography in Clinical Oncology Chun Ki Kim, M.D. Mount Sinai School of Medicine New York, New York

Colorectal Cancer:Clinical Indications for PET

Imaging Staging before primary resection? Detection of Lesions after Primary Resection

Staging before resection of recurrent disease.Rising CEA in the absence of a known source.Equivocal/residual lesion on conventional imaging.Patient is clinically symptomatic, but CEA is normal.

Monitoring treatment response (pre-op & post-op)

Page 28: Positron Emission Tomography in Clinical Oncology Chun Ki Kim, M.D. Mount Sinai School of Medicine New York, New York

Staging before resection of recurrent disease

Page 29: Positron Emission Tomography in Clinical Oncology Chun Ki Kim, M.D. Mount Sinai School of Medicine New York, New York

63 y/o woman with a H/O Colon Ca. and liver metastases

Page 30: Positron Emission Tomography in Clinical Oncology Chun Ki Kim, M.D. Mount Sinai School of Medicine New York, New York

79/M. Resection of Rectal Ca (Dukes B) 4 mos earlier,

CEA, CT: possible local relapse.

Page 31: Positron Emission Tomography in Clinical Oncology Chun Ki Kim, M.D. Mount Sinai School of Medicine New York, New York

T1 T2

T1 enhanced T1 enhanced

• F/68• H/O Colon Ca.• Rising CEA• CT/MRI;

multiple cysts

Page 32: Positron Emission Tomography in Clinical Oncology Chun Ki Kim, M.D. Mount Sinai School of Medicine New York, New York

Sagittal Transverse Coronal

Page 33: Positron Emission Tomography in Clinical Oncology Chun Ki Kim, M.D. Mount Sinai School of Medicine New York, New York

YW: Colon Ca• 3/00: (-) CT • 5/00: rising CEA

• 6/00: (+) PET

• 7/00: CT

Page 34: Positron Emission Tomography in Clinical Oncology Chun Ki Kim, M.D. Mount Sinai School of Medicine New York, New York

58/M - S/P Colon CaRising CEA

Coronal Coronal Transverse

Page 35: Positron Emission Tomography in Clinical Oncology Chun Ki Kim, M.D. Mount Sinai School of Medicine New York, New York

58/M - S/P Colon CaRising CEA

Local recurrence

Hemangioma

Page 36: Positron Emission Tomography in Clinical Oncology Chun Ki Kim, M.D. Mount Sinai School of Medicine New York, New York

• 48y/o with Colon Ca.• S/P Primary resection.• S/P Resection of liver lesion

• Now with CEA • CT: (-) for mets

Page 37: Positron Emission Tomography in Clinical Oncology Chun Ki Kim, M.D. Mount Sinai School of Medicine New York, New York

• 48y/o with Colon Ca.• S/P Primary resection.• S/P Resection of liver lesion

• Now with CEA • CT: (-) for mets

Page 38: Positron Emission Tomography in Clinical Oncology Chun Ki Kim, M.D. Mount Sinai School of Medicine New York, New York

N. G. 8/15/00Colon cancer with a Hx of UCProven mesenteric carcinomatosis

Page 39: Positron Emission Tomography in Clinical Oncology Chun Ki Kim, M.D. Mount Sinai School of Medicine New York, New York

1756441

Page 40: Positron Emission Tomography in Clinical Oncology Chun Ki Kim, M.D. Mount Sinai School of Medicine New York, New York

Huebner et al. J Nucl Med 2000;41:1177-1189

Page 41: Positron Emission Tomography in Clinical Oncology Chun Ki Kim, M.D. Mount Sinai School of Medicine New York, New York

Huebner et al. J Nucl Med 2000;41:1177-1189

Page 42: Positron Emission Tomography in Clinical Oncology Chun Ki Kim, M.D. Mount Sinai School of Medicine New York, New York

Colorectal Cancer: A possible algorithm

CT evidence of resectable disease in patient suitable for surgery

WholeBodyPET imaging

Page 43: Positron Emission Tomography in Clinical Oncology Chun Ki Kim, M.D. Mount Sinai School of Medicine New York, New York

Colorectal Cancer: A possible algorithm

CT evidence of resectable disease in patient suitable for surgery

WholeBodyPET imaging

Further evaluation of CT abnormality

All sites negative

Page 44: Positron Emission Tomography in Clinical Oncology Chun Ki Kim, M.D. Mount Sinai School of Medicine New York, New York

Colorectal Cancer: A possible algorithm

CT evidence of resectable disease in patient suitable for surgery

WholeBodyPET imaging

Further evaluation of CT abnormality

Surgery

All sites negative

PET = CT and other sites negative

Page 45: Positron Emission Tomography in Clinical Oncology Chun Ki Kim, M.D. Mount Sinai School of Medicine New York, New York

Colorectal Cancer: A possible algorithm

CT evidence of resectable disease in patient suitable for surgery

WholeBodyPET imaging

Further evaluation of CT abnormality

Non-surgical management

Surgery

All sites negative

+ ve at multipleSites

PET = CT and other sites negative

Page 46: Positron Emission Tomography in Clinical Oncology Chun Ki Kim, M.D. Mount Sinai School of Medicine New York, New York

44/F with Colon Ca, S/P primary resection.CT: multiple liver mets and a lung nodule

Treated with systemic chemoTx instead of intra-arterial chemoTx.

Staging:

Page 47: Positron Emission Tomography in Clinical Oncology Chun Ki Kim, M.D. Mount Sinai School of Medicine New York, New York

Colorectal Cancer:Clinical Indications for PET Imaging

Detection of Lesions Staging before resection of recurrent disease. Rising CEA in the absence of a known source. Equivocal/residual lesion on conventional imaging. Patient is clinically symptomatic, but CEA is normal.

Monitoring treatment response (pre-op & post-op) Staging before primary resection?

Page 48: Positron Emission Tomography in Clinical Oncology Chun Ki Kim, M.D. Mount Sinai School of Medicine New York, New York

S/P ChemoRx

Page 49: Positron Emission Tomography in Clinical Oncology Chun Ki Kim, M.D. Mount Sinai School of Medicine New York, New York

Before 2mo after Adjuvant chemo and radioTxPrior to surgery for rectal Ca.

Page 50: Positron Emission Tomography in Clinical Oncology Chun Ki Kim, M.D. Mount Sinai School of Medicine New York, New York

Optimal time to scan after treatment??

Uptake may be seen in inflammatory tissue / macrophages.

Residual FDG activity after treatment:Not always active tumor

• 1 month after Chemo.

PET findings at 1 mo ~ CT findings at 3 mosFindlay et al. J Clin Oncol 1996

• Several months after RT?

Page 51: Positron Emission Tomography in Clinical Oncology Chun Ki Kim, M.D. Mount Sinai School of Medicine New York, New York

Lymphoma: Indications for PET Imaging

Dx Staging Monitoring treatment response Recurrence?

Page 52: Positron Emission Tomography in Clinical Oncology Chun Ki Kim, M.D. Mount Sinai School of Medicine New York, New York

Evaluation of early therapeutic response:

Is treatment effective?FDG uptake represents cell viability.

FDG uptake can be markedly decreased or even completely suppressed after 1 or 2 cycles of chemotherapy

Early determination is important: To avoid the toxicity of ineffective therapy. To allow selection of a new therapeutic regimen.

Page 53: Positron Emission Tomography in Clinical Oncology Chun Ki Kim, M.D. Mount Sinai School of Medicine New York, New York

1846641Lymphoma

Before

After2 cylcles ofChemo

Page 54: Positron Emission Tomography in Clinical Oncology Chun Ki Kim, M.D. Mount Sinai School of Medicine New York, New York

Lymphoma

Before

After2 cylcles ofChemo

Page 55: Positron Emission Tomography in Clinical Oncology Chun Ki Kim, M.D. Mount Sinai School of Medicine New York, New York

56y/o : Lymphoma

Page 56: Positron Emission Tomography in Clinical Oncology Chun Ki Kim, M.D. Mount Sinai School of Medicine New York, New York

Before 1 month after XRT

Page 57: Positron Emission Tomography in Clinical Oncology Chun Ki Kim, M.D. Mount Sinai School of Medicine New York, New York

Esophageal/Gastro-esophageal Cancer:

Clinical Indications for PET Imaging

Pre-op stagingMonitoring treatment responseSuspected recurrence Prognostication

Page 58: Positron Emission Tomography in Clinical Oncology Chun Ki Kim, M.D. Mount Sinai School of Medicine New York, New York

Esophageal/ Gastro-esophageal Cancer:Clinical Indications for PET Imaging

Pre-op stagingCT: Limited sensitivityEUS: More accurate for assessing local

invasion and regional nodal mets.

Limitations: stenosis,

celiac,

right hepatic lobe, peritoneum

Page 59: Positron Emission Tomography in Clinical Oncology Chun Ki Kim, M.D. Mount Sinai School of Medicine New York, New York

(Choi et al: J Nucl Med 2000)

Evaluation of N stage of patients with Esophageal Cancer: 48 patients underwent esohagectomy and lymph node dissection (2 field=35pts, 3 field=13pts)

Page 60: Positron Emission Tomography in Clinical Oncology Chun Ki Kim, M.D. Mount Sinai School of Medicine New York, New York

Evaluation of metastases in Esophageal Cancer: CT versus PET

CT PET

Kole 1998 Lymph nodes 62% 90%Resectability 65% 88%

Choi 2000 Lymph nodes 78% 86%N staging 60% 83%

Luketich 1999 Distant mets 63% 84%

Page 61: Positron Emission Tomography in Clinical Oncology Chun Ki Kim, M.D. Mount Sinai School of Medicine New York, New York

Rt. Paratracheal

Subcarinal

Lt. Gastric

Common hepatic& Celiac

Rt. Paratracheal

Subcarinal

Lt. Gastric

Common hepatic& Celiac

Page 62: Positron Emission Tomography in Clinical Oncology Chun Ki Kim, M.D. Mount Sinai School of Medicine New York, New York

62F: Gastric Ca. S/P ResectionCT: RecurrencePET performed to exclude other sites of tumor

Ultrasound: confirmed a liver metsSurgery cancelled and the patient treated with Chemo

Page 63: Positron Emission Tomography in Clinical Oncology Chun Ki Kim, M.D. Mount Sinai School of Medicine New York, New York
Page 64: Positron Emission Tomography in Clinical Oncology Chun Ki Kim, M.D. Mount Sinai School of Medicine New York, New York

Gastro-esophageal Cancer:Clinical Indications for PET

Imaging

Pre-op stagingMonitoring treatment responseSuspected recurrence Prognostication

Page 65: Positron Emission Tomography in Clinical Oncology Chun Ki Kim, M.D. Mount Sinai School of Medicine New York, New York

Before

sagittal coronal

AfterRadiochemo

49M: large squamous esophageal Ca.Echo-endoscopy – an enlarged node

Page 66: Positron Emission Tomography in Clinical Oncology Chun Ki Kim, M.D. Mount Sinai School of Medicine New York, New York

Gastro-esophageal Cancer:Clinical Indications for PET

Imaging

Pre-op stagingMonitoring treatment responseSuspected recurrencePrognostication

Page 67: Positron Emission Tomography in Clinical Oncology Chun Ki Kim, M.D. Mount Sinai School of Medicine New York, New York

45M: S/P esophagectomy, Patient is clinically asymptomatic alkaline phosphatase

Page 68: Positron Emission Tomography in Clinical Oncology Chun Ki Kim, M.D. Mount Sinai School of Medicine New York, New York

Gastro-esophageal Cancer:Clinical Indications for PET

Imaging

Pre-op stagingMonitoring treatment responseSuspected recurrencePrognostication

Page 69: Positron Emission Tomography in Clinical Oncology Chun Ki Kim, M.D. Mount Sinai School of Medicine New York, New York

Surviavl based on initial PET scan identification of distant versus local disease only: (Luketich et al: Ann Thorac Surg 1999;68)

Page 70: Positron Emission Tomography in Clinical Oncology Chun Ki Kim, M.D. Mount Sinai School of Medicine New York, New York

Pancreatic Cancer:Potential Indications for PET Imaging

DDx: Chronic pancreatic mass vs. Cancer Staging: Nodal mets and liver mets. Monitoring treatment response Prognostication

Page 71: Positron Emission Tomography in Clinical Oncology Chun Ki Kim, M.D. Mount Sinai School of Medicine New York, New York

53/F: Pancreatic mass

Page 72: Positron Emission Tomography in Clinical Oncology Chun Ki Kim, M.D. Mount Sinai School of Medicine New York, New York

51F: CT: (1) Mass forming pancreatitis vs Cancer (2) Hepatic Hemangioma vs Metastasis

Coronal Sagittal

Page 73: Positron Emission Tomography in Clinical Oncology Chun Ki Kim, M.D. Mount Sinai School of Medicine New York, New York

Pancreatic Cancer:DDx: Chronic pancreatic mass vs. Cancer

Delbeke et al: J Nucl Med 1999

Page 74: Positron Emission Tomography in Clinical Oncology Chun Ki Kim, M.D. Mount Sinai School of Medicine New York, New York

Brain Tumor

Grading Prognosis/Survival.Necrosis or Residual disease after

radiation therapy?

Page 75: Positron Emission Tomography in Clinical Oncology Chun Ki Kim, M.D. Mount Sinai School of Medicine New York, New York

High Grade

Low Grade

Page 76: Positron Emission Tomography in Clinical Oncology Chun Ki Kim, M.D. Mount Sinai School of Medicine New York, New York

Kim CK et al. J Neuro-Oncol 1991

Page 77: Positron Emission Tomography in Clinical Oncology Chun Ki Kim, M.D. Mount Sinai School of Medicine New York, New York
Page 78: Positron Emission Tomography in Clinical Oncology Chun Ki Kim, M.D. Mount Sinai School of Medicine New York, New York

Thyroid Cancer Thyroglobulin (+)

Iodine-131 scan (-)

FDG PET scan is useful.

Page 79: Positron Emission Tomography in Clinical Oncology Chun Ki Kim, M.D. Mount Sinai School of Medicine New York, New York

IV

ML

FDG-PET I-131

Anterior Posterior

M

2 Coronal slices

Page 80: Positron Emission Tomography in Clinical Oncology Chun Ki Kim, M.D. Mount Sinai School of Medicine New York, New York

62 y/o male S/P Resection of transglottic right laryngeal cancerR/O Recurrence

Page 81: Positron Emission Tomography in Clinical Oncology Chun Ki Kim, M.D. Mount Sinai School of Medicine New York, New York

FDG PET Imaging

Determination of the site of unknown primary tumor

20~30%

Page 82: Positron Emission Tomography in Clinical Oncology Chun Ki Kim, M.D. Mount Sinai School of Medicine New York, New York

Prediction of tumor response to treatment:

Will the tumor respond to treatment?

Labeled Estrogen [F-18] 5-Fluorouracil (5-FU)

Page 83: Positron Emission Tomography in Clinical Oncology Chun Ki Kim, M.D. Mount Sinai School of Medicine New York, New York

FDG-PET Tumor Imaging

DDx: Is the lesion benign or malignant? Staging:

Re-staging: Evaluation of early therapeutic response: Scar/Necrosis vs recurrent/residual disease after surgery.

Scar/Necrosis vs recurrent/residual disease after XRT. Histologic grading / Prognosis.

Detection of unknown primary.

Page 84: Positron Emission Tomography in Clinical Oncology Chun Ki Kim, M.D. Mount Sinai School of Medicine New York, New York

Summary: PET

• Safe.• Shows all the organ systems of the body with one image.• Decreases the number of diagnostic (imaging) procedures.• Diagnoses disease often before it shows up on other tests.• Shows the progress of disease and how the body responds

to treatment.• Reduces or eliminates ineffective or unnecessary surgical

or medical treatments and hospitalization.• Significantly reduces multiple medical costs and avoids

needless pain to the patient.

Page 85: Positron Emission Tomography in Clinical Oncology Chun Ki Kim, M.D. Mount Sinai School of Medicine New York, New York

The influence of blood glucose levels

on 18FDG uptake in cancer(Crippa et al. Tumori 1997:83:748-752)

8 patients - 20 liver metastases on CT• PET 1: Fasting (92.4±10.2)

All 20 were (+) on PET.

• PET 2: Glucose infusion (158±13.8)6/20 undetected, and 10 lesions localized less clearly.

Page 86: Positron Emission Tomography in Clinical Oncology Chun Ki Kim, M.D. Mount Sinai School of Medicine New York, New York

• 70-years-old female smoker • CT showed Rt mid lung mass and inhomogeneity

throughout the liver

Page 87: Positron Emission Tomography in Clinical Oncology Chun Ki Kim, M.D. Mount Sinai School of Medicine New York, New York
Page 88: Positron Emission Tomography in Clinical Oncology Chun Ki Kim, M.D. Mount Sinai School of Medicine New York, New York

Coronal Sagittal

Page 89: Positron Emission Tomography in Clinical Oncology Chun Ki Kim, M.D. Mount Sinai School of Medicine New York, New York

55 y/o womanDx’ed with colon ca.S/P resection 2 yrs agoCEA level is risingNo evidence of recurrence. CT: normal.