1. 11 C-Methionine-PET in Multiple Myeloma: A Combined Study from Two Different Institutions.
- Author
-
Lapa C, Garcia-Velloso MJ, Lückerath K, Samnick S, Schreder M, Otero PR, Schmid JS, Herrmann K, Knop S, Buck AK, Einsele H, San-Miguel J, and Kortüm KM
- Subjects
- Biological Factors metabolism, Chelating Agents metabolism, Germany, Glucose-6-Phosphate administration & dosage, Glucose-6-Phosphate analogs & derivatives, Humans, Sensitivity and Specificity, Spain, Carbon Radioisotopes administration & dosage, Isotope Labeling methods, Methionine administration & dosage, Multiple Myeloma diagnostic imaging, Neoplasm Staging methods, Positron-Emission Tomography methods
- Abstract
11 C-methionine (MET) has recently emerged as an accurate marker of tumor burden and disease activity in patients with multiple myeloma (MM). This dual-center study aimed at further corroboration of the superiority of MET as positron emission tomography (PET) tracer for staging and re-staging MM, as compared to18 F-2`-deoxy-2`-fluoro-D-glucose (FDG). 78 patients with a history of solitary plasmacytoma (n=4), smoldering MM (SMM, n=5), and symptomatic MM (n=69) underwent both MET- and FDG-PET/computed tomography (CT) at the University Centers of Würzburg, Germany and Navarra, Spain. Scans were compared on a patient and on a lesion basis. Inter-reader agreement was also evaluated. In 2 patients, tumor biopsies for verification of discordant imaging results were available. MET-PET detected focal lesions (FL) in 59/78 subjects (75.6%), whereas FDG-PET/CT showed lesions in only 47 patients (60.3%; p<0.01), accordingly disease activity would have been missed in 12 patients. Directed biopsies of discordant results confirmed MET-PET/CT results in both cases. MET depicted more FL in 44 patients (56.4%; p<0.01), whereas in two patients (2/78), FDG proved superior. In the remainder (41.0%, 32/78), both tracers yielded comparable results. Inter-reader agreement for MET was higher than for FDG (κ = 0.82 vs κ = 0.72). This study demonstrates higher sensitivity of MET in comparison to standard FDG to detect intra- and extramedullary MM including histologic evidence of FDG-negative, viable disease exclusively detectable by MET-PET/CT. MET holds the potential to replace FDG as functional imaging standard for staging and re-staging of MM., Competing Interests: Competing Interests: The authors have declared that no competing interest exists.- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF