1. Potential role of combined FDG PET/CT & contrast enhancement MRI in a rectal carcinoma model with nodal metastases characterized by a poor FDG-avidity.
- Author
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Farace P, Conti G, Merigo F, Tambalo S, Marzola P, Sbarbati A, Quarta C, D'Ambrosio D, Chondrogiannis S, Nanni C, and Rubello D
- Subjects
- Animals, Contrast Media, HT29 Cells, Humans, Lymphatic Metastasis, Mice, Mice, Nude, Reproducibility of Results, Sensitivity and Specificity, Subtraction Technique, Adenocarcinoma diagnosis, Adenocarcinoma secondary, Fluorodeoxyglucose F18, Image Enhancement methods, Magnetic Resonance Imaging methods, Rectal Neoplasms diagnosis, Tomography, X-Ray Computed methods
- Abstract
Purpose: To investigate the additional role of MRI contrast enhancement (CE) in the primary tumor and the FDG uptake at PET in the lymph-node metastases., Materials and Methods: A model of colorectal cancer induced by orthotopic HT-29 cells microinjection, producing pelvic lymph node metastases, was assessed using CE-MRI and FDG-PET. Histology and GLUT-1 immunohistochemistry were performed on primary tumors and iliac lymph nodes., Results: Primary tumors were characterized by low FDG-uptake but high CE-MRI, particularly at tumor periphery. Undetectable FDG-uptake characterized the metastatic lymph-nodes. Histology revealed large stromal bundles at tumor periphery and a dense network of stromal fibers and neoplastic cells in the inner portion of the tumors. Both primary tumors and positive lymph nodes showed poor GLUT-1 staining., Conclusion: Our data support the complementary role of MRI-CE and FDG PET in some types of carcinomas characterized by abundant cancer-associated stroma and poor FDG avidity consequent to poor GLUT-1 transported. In these tumors FDG-PET alone may be not completely adequate to obtain an adequate tumor radiotherapy planning, and a combination with dual CE-MRI is strongly recommended., (Copyright © 2011 Elsevier Ireland Ltd. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2012
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