1. Evaluating repetitive 18F-fluoroazomycin-arabinoside (18FAZA) PET in the setting of MRI guided adaptive radiotherapy in cervical cancer.
- Author
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Schuetz, Matthias, Schmid, Maximilian P., Pötter, Richard, Kommata, Spyridoula, Georg, Dietmar, Lukic, Dobrica, Dudczak, Robert, Kletter, Kurt, Dimopoulos, Johannes, Karanikas, Georgios, and Bachtiary, Barbara
- Subjects
ANALYSIS of variance ,HYPOXEMIA ,CERVICAL cancer ,FLUORINE isotopes ,IMIDAZOLES ,MAGNETIC resonance imaging ,COMPUTERS in medicine ,HEALTH outcome assessment ,RADIATION doses ,RADIOISOTOPES ,POSITRON emission tomography ,QUALITATIVE research ,PILOT projects ,QUANTITATIVE research ,TREATMENT effectiveness ,PHARMACOKINETICS ,RADIOGRAPHY ,RADIOTHERAPY - Abstract
Background. The aim of this pilot study was to assess tumour hypoxia in patients with cervical cancer before, during and after combined radio-chemotherapy and Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) guided brachytherapy (BT) by use of the hypoxia Positron Emission Tomography (PET) tracer
18 F-fluoroazomycin-arabinoside (18 FAZA ). Material and methods. Fifteen consecutive patients with locally advanced cervical cancer referred for definitive radiotherapy (RT) were included in an approved clinical protocol. Stage distribution was 3 IB1, 1 IB2, 10 IIB, 1 IIIB, tumour volume was 55 cm3 (+/− 67, SD). Dynamic and static18 FAZA -PET scans were performed before, during and after external beam therapy (EBRT) and image guided BT +/− concomitant cisplatin. Dose was prescribed to the individual High Risk Clinical Target Volume (HR CTV) taking into account the dose volume constraints for adjacent organs at risk. Results. Five patients had visually identifiable tumours on18 FAZA -PET scans performed prior to radio-chemotherapy and four patients before brachytherapy. One of five18 FAZA PET positive patients had incomplete remission three months after RT, one had regional recurrence. Four of ten18 FAZA-PET negative patients developed distant metastases. The one patient with incomplete remission received 69 Gy (D90) in the HR CTV, whereas all other patients received mean 99 Gy (+/−12, SD). Conclusion. PET imaging with18 FAZA is feasible in patients with cancer of the uterine cervix. However, its predictive and prognostic value remains to be clarified. This applies in particular for the additional value of18 FAZA-PET compared to morphologic repetitive MRI within the setting of image guided high dose radiotherapy which may contribute to overcome hypoxia related radioresistance. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2010
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