1. Added-value of molecular imaging in myocardial metastasis of an ileal neuroendocrine tumour treated with peptide receptor radionuclide therapy: a case report.
- Author
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Araujo, María Del Carmen Mallón, Casas, Estephany Abou Jokh, Casas, Charigan Abou Jokh, and Núñez, Virginia Pubul
- Subjects
NEUROENDOCRINE tumors ,MYOCARDIUM ,METASTASIS ,RADIOISOTOPE therapy ,PEPTIDE receptors ,CARCINOID heart disease - Abstract
Background Neuroendocrine tumours (NET) conform a rare type of neoplasm, mostly located in the gastrointestinal tract. They are slow-growing tumours, so at the time of the diagnosis, most patients present with metastatic lesions, mainly in the liver. The myocardium is a rare and important organ for metastasis, in which
68 Ga-Dotatate positron emission tomography-computed tomography (PET/CT) shows a high diagnostic sensitivity for its detection, contrary to carcinoid valve disease, where anatomic imaging plays a key role, especially the echocardiogram. Case summary A 60-year-old man diagnosed with metastatic progressive ileal NET, who underwent a68 Ga-Dotatate PET/CT prior177 Lu-Dotatate therapy, showed a metastatic lesion in the left ventricle that was undetected in previous studies, such as an Octreoscan® and CT. A transthoracic echocardiogram was performed revealing the existence of a second cardiac lesion, a tricuspid valve carcinoid disease. A cardiac magnetic resonance showed no late gadolinium enhancement. Discussion The68 Ga-Dotatate PET/CT is currently considered the gold standard for assessment and follow-up of NET, including those with rare sites of metastasis such as cardiac infiltration. In this case, it stimulated the persue of possible cardiac involvement, detecting the coexistence of two types of lesions (cardiac metastasis and carcinoid valve disease). Of these, carcinoid valvulopathy develops in 50% of NET cases, while cardiac metastasis (CM) is less frequent (only 5%). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2021
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