EJNMMI Research 2018, 8(Suppl 1):5
DOI 10.1186/s13550-017-0354-4
MEETING ABSTRACTS
Open Access
Abstracts of the 33rd International Austrian
Winter Symposium
Zell am See, Austria. 24-27 January 2018
Published: 23 January 2018
OP01
Ultra-Fast Wholebody Oncologic FDG PET/CT: A new capability
enabled by digital photon counting PET/CT technology
K. Binzel1, A. Adelaja1, C. L. Wright1, D. Scharre2, J. Zhang1, M. V. Knopp1
1
Wright Center of Innovation in Biomedical Imaging, Department of
Radiology, The Ohio State University Wexner Medical Center, Columbus,
OH, USA; 2Department of Neurology, The Ohio State University Wexner
Medical Center, Columbus, OH, USA
Correspondence: K. Binzel
EJNMMI Research 2018, 8(Suppl 1):OP01
Aim: To demonstrate the clinical capability of ultra-fast whole body
PET acquisition enabled by digital photon counting PET (dPET) and
to assess and compare its diagnostic and quantitative characteristics
to current clinical PET acquisition.
Methods: Twenty-five patients scheduled for FDG whole body PET/
CT were imaged using three separate acquisitions as part of intraindividual comparison study with a pre-commercial release dPET/CT
(Vereos) and cPET/CT (Gemini, Philips, Cleveland). Standard cPET
imaging was performed at ~75 min p.i. of ~ 450 MBq FDG with investigational dPET imaged at ~55 min p.i. The first dPET acquisition
was performed using 90s/bed position, immediately followed by a
9s/bed position.
Acquisition which lead to average table times of ~15 and ~2 min.
These were compared with standard-of-care 90s/bed position cPET.
The 9s/bed dPET listmode data were reconstructed using a previously optimized methodology. All other aspects of image acquisition
were kept identical. Three blinded reviewers evaluated the data sets
regarding visual characteristics, diagnostic confidence and semiquantitative readouts.
Results: Visual assessment scores were significantly higher for 90s/bed
dPET whole body (p<0.01) with no difference between 9s/bed dPET
and 90s/bed cPET. Quantitatively, the 9s/bed dPET images presented
slightly increased background noise, however there was no significant
impact on diagnostic confidence or SUV measures of FDG-avid lesions.
Conclusion: Next generation digital photon counting PET detector
technology enables a new capability of Ultra-Fast (~2min) wholebody
acquisition with comparable diagnostic confidence and quantitative
precision to current generation cPET acquisitions taking 10 times longer. This allows for new PET workflow concepts, improved patient
comfort, minimized patient motion and whole-body pseudo-dynamic
imaging of tracer uptake.
Reference
1. Wright CL, Binzel K, Zhang J, Knopp MV. Advanced Functional Tumor Imaging
and Precision Nuclear Medicine Enabled by Digital PET Technologies. Contrast
Media & Molecular Imaging. 2017;2017:5260305. https://doi.org/10.1155/2017/
5260305.
OP02
The FALCON trial: Impact of 18F-fluciclovine PET/CT on clinical
management choices for men with biochemically recurrent
prostate cancer
E. J. Teoh1, D. Bottomley2, A. Scarsbrook2, H. Payne3, A. Afaq3,
J. Bomanji3, N. van As4, S. Chua4, P. Hoskin5, A. Chambers5,
G. J. Cook6, V. S. Warbey6, A. Chau7, P. Ward7, M. P. Miller7, D.J. Stevens7,
L. Wilson7, F. V. Gleeson1
1
Departments of Radiology and Nuclear Medicine, Oxford University
Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust, Oxford, UK; 2The Leeds Teaching
Hospitals NHS Trust, Leeds, UK; 3University College London, London, UK;
4
The Royal Marsden NHS Foundation Trust, London, UK; 5Mount Vernon
Cancer Centre, London, UK; 6King's College London, London, UK; 7Blue
Earth Diagnostics, Oxford, UK
Correspondence: E. J. Teoh
EJNMMI Research 2018, 8(Suppl 1):OP02
Aim: Detection of the extent of local recurrence and of
metastases in biochemical recurrence (BCR) of prostate cancer facilitates selection of appropriate treatment. The FALCON trial
(NCT02578940) assessed the impact of 18F-fluciclovine PET/CT on
the clinical management of men with BCR of prostate cancer
following initial radical therapy.
Methods: Men being considered for curative-intent salvage therapy following first BCR were recruited at 6 UK sites. Management
plans were documented prior to and following 18F-fluciclovine
PET/CT imaging. Post-scan changes to treatment modality such as
salvage radiotherapy [RT] to systemic therapy were classed as
‘major’, while changes within a modality (e.g. modified RT fields)
were classed as ‘other’. A pre-planned interim analysis of the first
85 patients was conducted; recruitment was to be stopped for
efficacy if the number of treatment changes was > 45 (52.9%;
97.5% CI: 40.3–62.3%), or for futility if ≤ 8 (9.4%, 97.5% CI: 3.6–
18.9%).
Results: The 85 enrolled patients were a mean 4.8 y post-initial diagnosis, with a median age of 67 y and median PSA of 0.63ng/mL.
Twelve (14.1%) had a Gleason score ≤ 6, 60 (70.6%) had a
score of 7 and 13 (15.3%) had a score ≥ 8. Most (56; 65.9%)
had previously undergone radical prostatectomy (RP), with 27
having received RT (± other therapy). The majority of those
imaged (52; 61.2%) had a change in management (CIM) postscan (see Table 1). Recruitment was subsequently stop as the
pre-specified condition defining overwhelming efficacy was
met.
Conclusion: This prospective trial shows 18F-fluciclovine PET/CT
has substantial impact on clinical decisions for men with a
first BCR of prostate cancer after curative-intent primary
therapy.
© The Author(s). 2018 Open Access This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0
International License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and
reproduction in any medium, provided you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to
the Creative Commons license, and indicate if changes were made.
EJNMMI Research 2018, 8(Suppl 1):5
Page 2 of 12
Table 1 (abstract OP02). See text for description
Patients
N = 85
Detection rate:
n (%)
Patient
44/85 (51.8)
Prostate/bed
34/85 (40.0)
Extraprostatic
19/85 (22.4)
Pelvic lymph nodes
12/85 (14.1)
Bone
9/85 (10.6)
CIM: n (%)
52/85 (61.2)
Prior RP
Positive
24/52 (46.2)
18
F-fluciclovine scan
Major CIM: n (%)
Salvage therapy to watchful waiting
Salvage therapy to systemic therapy
Other CIM: n (%)
Modified RT field
41/52 (78.8)
31/52 (59.6)
13/52 (25.0)
18/52 (34.6)
21/52 (40.4)
21/52 (40.4)
OP03
Bi-213-anti-EGFR-MAb therapy of recurrent bladder cancer
K. Scheidhauer1, C. Seidl1, M. Autenrieth2, F. Bruchertseifer3,
C. Apostolidis3, F. Kurtz2, T. Horn2, C. Pfob1, M. Schwaiger1, J. Gschwend2,
C. D’Alessandria1, A. Morgenstern3
1
TU München, Klinikum rechts der Isar, Nuklearmedizin, München,
Germany; 2TU München, Klinikum rechts der Isar, Urologie, München,
Germany; 3JRC, Institute for Transuranium, Karlsruhe, Germany
Correspondence: K. Scheidhauer
EJNMMI Research 2018, 8(Suppl 1):OP03
This abstract is not included here as it has already been published [1].
Reference
[1] K. Scheidhauer, C. Seidl, F. Bruchertseifer, et al. “Bi-213-anti-EGFR-MAb
therapy of recurrent bladder cancer - a pilot study.” Eur J Nucl Med Mol
Imaging (2017) 44(Suppl 2):S130.
OP04
Early PET imaging of 68Ga-PSMA-11 PET/CT increases the
detection rate of local recurrence in prostate cancer patients with
biochemical recurrence
C. Uprimny, A. Kroiss, C. Decristoforo, E. von Guggenberg, B. Nilica,
W. Horninger, I. Virgolini
Department of Nuclear Medicine, Medical University Innsbruck, Austria;
Anichstrasse 32, 6020 Innsbruck, Austria
Correspondence: C. Uprimny
EJNMMI Research 2018, 8(Suppl 1):OP04
This abstract is not included here as it has already been published [1].
Reference
[1] Uprimny C, Kroiss AS, Decristoforo C et al. “Additional value of early
[68]Ga-PSMA-11 PET Imaging in the assessment of local recurrence in
prostate cancer patients with biochemical recurrence.” Eur J Nucl Med
Mol Imaging (2017)44(Suppl 2):S404.
OP05
Gender Specific Analysis of 11C-Methionine PET Examination in
Patients with Newly Diagnosed Gliomas
S. Rasul1, N. Poetsch1, A. Woehrer2M. Preusser3, M. Mitterhauser1,
W. Wadsak14,, G. Widhalm5, M. Mischkulnig5, M. Hacker1, T. Traub-Weidinger1
1
Department of Biomedical Imaging and Image-guided Therapy,
Division of Nuclear Medicine, Medical University of Vienna, Vienna,
Austria; 2Clinical Institute of Neurology, Medical University of Vienna,
Vienna, Austria; 3Clinical University of Internal Medicine I, Medical
University of Vienna, Vienna, Austria; 4CBmed GmbH, Center for
Biomarker Research in Medicine, Graz, Austria; 5Clinical University of
Neuro-surgery, Medical University of Vienna, Vienna, Austria
Correspondence: S. Rasul
EJNMMI Research 2018, 8(Suppl 1):OP05
Aim: L-[S-methyl- 11C]methionine (MET) PET is a highly sensitive and
established method for glioma imaging. Little is known about gender
specific aspects of glioma with respect to imaging characteristics.
The aim of this study was to assess gender specific differences in distribution, localization as well as in diagnosis by using MET PET of
newly diagnosed gliomas.
Methods: 160 glioma patients (45% female, mean age: 45, range 18 84 yrs.) were retrospectively analyzed. Gender specific differences
based on clinical presentation at the time of the diagnosis, visual
and semi-quantitative evaluation by means of tumor to background
(T/N) ratio in pre-surgical MET PET, the isocitrate dehydrogenase 1R132H mutational status (IDH1-R132H), and survival using KaplanMeier estimates and a Cox proportional hazard model were
determined.
Results: There were no significant differences regarding clinical
symptoms, tumor size, histology, and IDH1-R132H mutations between male and female patients at the time of diagnosis. Nevertheless, statistically significant differences were found for the surgical
approach (tumor resection, open biopsy and stereotactic biopsy) as
well as for visual PET analysis (focal, focal-areal, multifocal-areal, areal,
and negative) between male and female studied patients (P< 0.01).
The T/N ratio was significantly higher in male than in female patients
(3.0 ± 1.5 vs. 2.5 ± 1.3, P= 0.03). Additionally, in comparison to female
patients, male patients showed a higher number of occipital tumors
(P= 0.02) and significantly lower median overall survival rate (76 vs.
112 months, P= 0.02).
Conclusion: Results of the study demonstrated gender specific differences in the localization of the tumor, MET PET analysis as well as in
the surgical approaches and survival rate in patients with gliomas.
Reference
1. Rasmussen, B.K., Hansen, S., Laursen, R.J. et al. Epidemiology of glioma:
clinical characteristics, symptoms, and predictors of glioma patients
grade I–IV in the the Danish Neuro-Oncology Registry. J Neurooncol
(2017). https://doi.org/10.1007/s11060-017-2607-5
OP06
Assessing Post-Radioembolization Lung Shunt Fraction of
Yttrium-90 Microspheres: A Clinical Feasibility Study Using Digital
Photon Counting PET/CT
C. L. Wright1, K. Binzel1, E. J. Wuthrick2, E. D. Miller2, P. Maniawski3,
J. Zhang1, M. V. Knopp1
1
Wright Center of Innovation, The Ohio State University, Columbus, OH,
USA; 2Radiation Oncology, The Ohio State University Wexner Medical
Center, Columbus, OH, USA; 3Clinical Science, Philips Healthcare,
Cleveland, OH, USA
Correspondence: C. L. Wright
EJNMMI Research 2018, 8(Suppl 1):OP06
EJNMMI Research 2018, 8(Suppl 1):5
Aim: Targeted radioembolization therapy with intra-arterially administered Yttrium-90 microspheres is routinely used for patients with
unresectable hepatic malignancies and metastases. There remains an
unmet clinical need for accurate imaging based assessment of
Yttrium-90 (90Y) microsphere biodistribution in the lungs following
radioembolization. At present, pre-radioembolization planning uses
intra-arterial administration of 99mTc macroaggregated albumin
(MAA) followed by quantitative scintigraphy to detect and measure
extra-hepatic shunting from the liver to the lungs (i.e., lung shunt
fraction or LSF). During radioembolization, catheter-directed
microspheres may potentially pass through tumor-associated arteriovenous shunts and then become deposited within the pulmonary
vasculature which can contribute to dose-dependent radiation pneumonitis [1]. Although scintigraphic bremsstrahlung imaging is
routinely used to qualitatively verify the microsphere distribution
within the treated liver, its utility in quantitatively assessing postradioembolization LSF is greatly limited. It has been demonstrated
that conventional PET imaging of the annihilation radiation
generated by 90Y internal pair production can produce diagnostic
images which can be further analyzed quantitatively [2]. Recently,
digital photon counting PET/CT (dPET/CT) imaging for postradioembolization assessment of 90Y microsphere biodistribution in
the liver was demonstrated to be clinical feasible [3, 4]. Furthermore,
preliminary results with dPET/CT demonstrates its capability for
detecting discrete foci of ultra-low dose residual 90Y microspheres
within post-radioembolization delivery systems (5-272 MBq). The aim
of this study is to generate clinical feasibility data for dPET/CT estimation of 90Y microsphere LSF following radioembolization and
compare it with the pre-therapy 99mTc MAA LSF.
Methods: Standard pre-therapy 99mTc MAA and post-therapy 90Y
bremsstrahlung scintigraphic and SPECT/CT imaging was performed
in 8 patients who underwent routine interventional radioembolization with 90Y glass microspheres. As part of an ongoing clinical trial,
90Y dPET/CT imaging of the lungs and liver was performed in each
patient (4-50 h following radioembolization) using a total image acquisition time of 21 min. Intra-individual comparison of pre/post
therapy SPECT/CT and post-therapy dPET/CT image quality, intrahepatic radioactivity distribution, pre-/post-therapy concordance, and
volumetric assessment of intrahepatic radioactivity was performed
using the Intellispace Portal workstation (Philips). The 99mTc MAA
LSF was calculated using planar scintigraphy with regions of interest
(ROI) placed around the lungs and liver on anterior and posterior planar imaging. Pre-therapy 99mTc MAA LSF was calculated using the
geometric mean of the anterior and posterior counts of the lungs
with respect to the anterior and posterior counts of the lungs plus
liver. Digital PET/CT assessment of post-therapy 90Y microsphere LSF
was performed using MIMVista (MIM Software). ROIs of the lungs and
liver were again generating using a region-grow technique combined
with thresholding. 90Y LSF with dPET/CT was calculated using the integral activity in the lungs with respect to the integral activity in the
lungs plus liver.
Results: All patients had evaluable pre-therapy 99mTc MAA, posttherapy 90Y bremsstrahlung, and post-therapy 90Y dPET/CT images
for qualitative assessment of intrahepatic radioactivity distribution. In
all patients, 90Y dPET imaging enabled better image quality and
increased 90Y-to-background contrast which improved qualitative
and quantitative volumetric assessment of intrahepatic microsphere
distribution when compared with bremsstrahlung SPECT. Posttherapy dPET/CT also improved assessment for concordance/discordance with pre-therapy MAA SPECT/CT when compared with
bremsstrahlung SPECT/CT. Post-therapy 90Y bremsstrahlung SPECT
consistently overestimated liver treatment volumes when compared
with pre-therapy MAA SPECT and 90Y dPET. There were no instances
of significant shunting of 90Y microspheres outside of the liver. No
discrete foci of abnormally increased 90Y activity were detected in
the lungs and dPET/CT estimation of 90Y LSF was consistently less
than the pre-therapy MAA LSF.
Page 3 of 12
Conclusion: To date, no quantitative PET measurement of the 90Y
microsphere LSF following radioembolization has been reported and
no data are currently available comparing the pre-therapy MAA LSF
and the post-therapy 90Y microsphere LSF. One challenge is that
there is no reference standard for estimating the LSF other than planar scintigraphic imaging of the chest and abdomen following the
intra-arterial MAA administration. Given that 90Y microsphere dosage
is based upon the pre-therapy 99mTc MAA LSF and that MAA particles are more variable in size (e.g., 10-90 microns) than 90Y microspheres (20-35 microns), quantitative estimation of the post-therapy
90Y microsphere LSF using dPET/CT approaches may have diagnostic
and therapeutic impact by identifying patients with smaller or larger
than anticipated LSFs. In particular, subsets of patients would be
identified on post-therapy 90Y PET imaging that may be eligible for
additional radioembolization therapy (i.e., patients with 50 Gy cumulative lung dose). Routine estimates of 90Y dPET LSF would also
greatly increase our understanding of tumor-induced neovascularity
and the degree of vascular shunting in various liver malignancies/
metastases targeted by 90Y radioembolization therapy.
Research Support: This project was enabled by the Ohio Third
Frontier Awards (TECH 09-028, TECH 10-012, TECH 13-060), Wright
Center of Innovation in Biomedical Imaging Development Fund.
Philips Healthcare provided the investigational pre-commercial
release dPET/CT system. CLW is supported by American Cancer
Society, Radiological Society of North America, and National Cancer
Institute – Clinical Research Loan Repayment Program.
References
1. Wright, C.L., et al., Radiation pneumonitis following yttrium-90 radioembolization: case report and literature review. J Vasc Interv Radiol, 2012.
23(5): p. 669-74.
2. Wright, C.L., et al., Theranostic Imaging of Yttrium-90. Biomed Res Int,
2015. 2015: p. 481279.
3. Wright, C.L., et al., 90Y Digital PET/CT Imaging Following
Radioembolization. Clin Nucl Med, 2016. 41(12): p. 975-976.
4. Wright, C.L., et al., Clinical feasibility of 90Y digital PET/CT for imaging
microsphere biodistribution following radioembolization. Eur J Nucl Med
Mol Imaging, 2017. 44(7): p. 1194-1197.
OP07
Patient radiation exposure after parathyroid imaging in nuclear
medicine
Sebastijan Rep1, Marko Hocevar2, Janja Vaupotic3, Urban Zdesar4,
Katja Zaletel1, Luka Lezaic1
1
Department of Nuclear Medicine, University Medical Centre Ljubljana,
Ljubljana, Slovenia; 2Department of Oncological Surgery, Oncology
Institute Ljubljana, Ljubljana, Slovenia; 3Jozef Stefan Institute Ljubljana,
Ljubljana, Slovenia; 4Institute of Occupational Safety Ljubljana, Ljubljana,
Slovenia
Correspondence: Sebastijan Rep
EJNMMI Research 2018, 8(Suppl 1):OP07
Aim: The aim of our study was to measure the ED and organ doses
for conventional subtraction scintigraphy, dual-phase MIBI SPECT/CT
and FCH dual-phase PET/CT.
Methods: Twenty-five patients referred for parathyroid imaging with
a clinical indication of primary hyperparathyroidism underwent parathyroid subtraction scintigraphy and dual-phase SPECT/CT imaging
with the addition of FCH PET/CT. Radiation exposure was calculated
for administered activities of radiopharmaceuticals using ICRP
weighting factors and for CT exposure at hybrid imaging using doselength products and ImPACT CT Patient Dosimetry Calculator.
Results: The highest radiation exposure was caused by conventional
parathyroid subtraction scintigraphy (7.27 mSv), followed by dualphase MIBI SPECT/CT (6.81 mSv). The radiation exposure was lowest
for dual-phase FCH PET/CT imaging (2.86 mSv). The added CT imaging for both hybrid approaches did not cause significant additional
EJNMMI Research 2018, 8(Suppl 1):5
radiation exposure (1.41 mSv for MIBI SPECT/CT, additional 26.11 %
to overall exposure; 0.86 mSv for FCH PET/CT, additional 43.51 % to
overall exposure).
Conclusion: According to our results, emerging FCH PET/CT imaging
techniques lower radiation exposure to patients in comparison to
conventional scintigraphic imaging for HPG
References
1. Pallan S, Rahman MO, Khan AA. Diagnosis and management of primary
hyperparathyroidism. BMJ (Clinical research ed.). 2012;344:e1013.
2. Lezaic L, Rep S, Sever MJ, Kocjan T, Hocevar M, Fettich J. 18FFluorocholine PET/CT for localization of hyperfunctioning parathyroid
tissue in primary hyperparathyroidism: a pilot study. European journal of
nuclear medicine and molecular imaging. 2014;41:2083-2089.
3. Cazaentre T, Clivaz F, Triponez F. False-positive result in 18F-fluorocholine
PET/CT due to incidental and ectopic parathyroid hyperplasia. Clinical nuclear medicine. 2014;39:e328-e330.
4. Michaud L, Balogova S, Burgess A, Ohnona J, Huchet V, Kerrou K et al.. A pilot
comparison of 18F-fluorocholine PET/CT, ultrasonography and 123I/99mTcsestaMIBI dual-phase dual-isotope scintigraphyin the preoperative localization
of hyperfunctioning parathyroid glands in primary or secondary hyperparathyroidism: influence of thyroid anomalies. Medicine. 2015;94:e1701.
5. Kluijfhout WP, Vorselaars WMCM, Vriens MR, BorelRinkes IHM, Valk GD, de
Keizer B. Enabling minimal invasive parathyroidectomy for patients with
primary hyperparathyroidism using Tc-99m-sestamibi SPECT-CT, ultrasound and first results of (18)F-fluorocholine PET-CT. European journal of
radiology. 2015;84:1745-1751.
7. Larkin AM, Serulle Y, Wagner S, Noz ME, Friedman K. Quantifying the
increase in radiation exposure associated with SPECT/CT compared to
SPECT alone for routine nuclear medicine examinations. International
journal of molecular imaging. 2011;2011:897202.
8. Montes C, Tamayo P, Hernandez J, Gomez-Caminero F, García S, Martín C
et al.. Estimation of the total effective dose from low-dose CT scans and
radiopharmaceutical administrations delivered to patients undergoing
SPECT/CT explorations. Annals of nuclear medicine. 2013;27:610-617.
9. Radiation dose to patients from radiopharmaceuticals (addendum 2 to
ICRP publication 53). Annals of the ICRP. 1998;28:1-126.
10. The 2007 Recommendations of the International Commission on Radiological
Protection. ICRP publication 103. Annals of the ICRP. 2007;37:1-332.
11. Radiation dose to patients from radiopharmaceuticals (A fourth
addendum to ICRP Publication 53). Annals of the ICRP. 2013;43:1-22.
OP08
Sex differences in blood pharmacokinetics and metabolism of
(S)-[18F]THK5117 and [18F]THK5351 in rats
S. Mairinger1, Thomas Filip1, M. Sauberer1, S. Flunkert2, T. Wanek1,
J. Stanek1,3, N. Okamura4, O. Langer1,3, C. Kuntner1
1
Biomedical Systems, Center for Health & Bioresources, AIT Austrian
Institute of Technology GmbH, Seibersdorf, Austria;
2
Neuropharmacology, QPS Austria GmbH, Grambach, Austria;
3
Department of Clinical Pharmacology, Medical University of Vienna,
Vienna, Austria; 4Division of Pharmacology, Faculty of Medicine, Tohoku
Medical and Pharmaceutical University, Sendai, Japan
Correspondence: S. Mairinger
EJNMMI Research 2018, 8(Suppl 1):OP08
Aim: Tau deposition is one of the neuropathological hallmarks of
Alzheimer’s disease (AD). Among the different developed radiotracers, the 2-arylquinoline derivatives (S)-[18F]THK5117 and
[18F]THK5351 show high affinity for neurofibrillary tangles [1, 2]. In
vivo quantification of tau binding is usually performed by calculating
uptake ratios between tau-rich target regions and non-target regions
in the brain. However, kinetic modelling has also been proposed as
an alternative to determine tau binding. Whereas these radiotracers
have been investigated in different mouse AD models, kinetic modelling is precluded in mice by their small blood volume. Due to their
higher blood volume, rat models with tau pathology may thus offer
the possibility to perform arterial blood sampling and kinetic modelling. To determine the feasibility of this approach, we measured
blood pharmacokinetics and radiotracer metabolism in female and
male rats.
Page 4 of 12
Methods: Female and male rats (n=4-6) were cannulated via the femoral artery for continuous blood sampling. Blood sampling was performed every 5-6 sec for the first 3 min and then at 5, 10, 20, 30, 40,
50 and 60 min after (S)-[18F]THK5117 or [18F]THK5351 injection.
After collection of the 60 min blood sample, animals were sacrificed
and organs were excised. Blood from minute 5, 20 and 60 was processed to plasma. Radiolabelled metabolites in plasma, brain, liver and
urine were analyzed by radio-thin-layer chromatography (radio-TLC).
Results: Plasma pharmacokinetics and metabolism were significantly
different between female and male rats for both investigated
radiotracers. (S)-[18F]THK5117 plasma clearance was faster in female
(1.33±0.24 mL/h/kg BW) than in male (0.87±0.17 mL/h/kg BW) rats
(p=0.003). For (S)-[18F]THK5117, the percentage of unmetabolized
parent was different between both sexes (5 min: 63% (f) vs 78% (m),
p=0.02; 20 min: 43% (f) vs 23% (m), p<0.0001; 60 min: 32% (f) vs 9%
(m), p<0.00001). Similar observations were made for [18F]THK5351.
Plasma clearance was faster in female compared to male rats
(1.07±0.23 mL/h/kg BW vs 0.67±0.04 mL/h/kg BW, p=0.02) and the
percentage of radiolabelled metabolites in plasma was also different
(20 min: 50% (f) vs 19% (m), p=0.01; 60 min: 37% (f) vs 4% (m),
p<0.0001). In the liver, 13% (f) vs 6% (m) unchanged parent was measured for (S)-[18F]THK5117 and 16% (f) vs 3% (m) for [18F]THK5351. In
the brain, 91-96% and 84-90% of total radioactivity consisted of unmetabolized (S)-[18F]THK5117 and [18F]THK5351, respectively.
Conclusion: Our results show pronounced sex differences in blood
pharmacokinetics and metabolism of [18F]THK5117 and
[18F]THK5351 in rats. Female animals showed a faster plasma clearance of both radiotracers. These results underline the importance of
investigating both sexes and also support the notion that individual
input functions are needed for kinetic modelling analyses.
References
1 Okamura N, Furumoto S, Harada R, Tago T, Yoshikawa T, Fodero-Tavoletti M,
et al. Novel 18F-labeled arylquinoline derivatives for noninvasive imaging of
tau pathology in Alzheimer disease. J Nucl Med 2013;54:1420-7.
2. Harada R, Okamura N, Furumoto S, Furukawa K, Ishiki A, Tomita N, et al.
18F-THK5351: A Novel PET Radiotracer for Imaging Neurofibrillary Pathology in Alzheimer Disease. J Nucl Med 2016;57:208-14.
OP09
High diagnostic value of a new renal tubular imaging agent
“L – Ethylenedicysteine” in children dynamic scintigraphy
M. C. Fornito1, R. Balzano1, V. Di Martino1, S. Cacciaguerra2, G. Russo3
1
Nuclear Medicine Department PET/TC center Arnas Garibaldi Catania,
Catania, Italy; 2Pediatric Surgery Department Arnas Garibaldi Catania,
Catania, Italy; 3H. Pharmacy Department Arnas Garibaldi Catania, Catania,
Italy
Correspondence: M. C. Fornito
EJNMMI Research 2018, 8(Suppl 1):OP09
This abstract is not included here as it has already been published [1].
Reference
[1] M.C. Fornito, S. Russo, A. Ruggeri et al. “High diagnostic value of a new
renal tubular imaging agent ‘ethylenedicysteine’ in children dynamic
scintigraphy”. Clin Transl Imaging (2017) 5 (Suppl 1):S110.
OP10
Peptides labelling with 64Cu and 68Ga on heterogeneous phase
using a microfludic system
D. Seifert1, M. Kleinova1, A. Cepa1, J. Ralis1, P. Hanc1, O. Lebeda1,
M. Mosa2
1
Nuclear Physics Institute of the CAS, Rez, Czech Republic; 2Charles
university Faculty of Science Prague, Prague, Czech Republic
Correspondence: D. Seifert
EJNMMI Research 2018, 8(Suppl 1):OP10
Aim: We present a new approach to solid phase peptide labeling on
a microfluidic system based on the PMMA matrix with the c18t sorbent. The chip allows for in-situ labelling at elevated temperatures
up to 100 °C. Labeling is performed in the three subsequent steps.
EJNMMI Research 2018, 8(Suppl 1):5
Methods: 1st step: The selected peptide precursor was loaded onto
the microfluidic chip activated with 2 ml of water and 2 ml of EtOH
and then flushed with 0.1 M MES mobile phase at pH 5.5. As a model
peptide we chose DOTA-TOC that was injected in a 500 μl volume
(12.5 μg) and deposited on the sorbent matrix (C18t, 20 mg in a volume of 100 μl).
2nd step: The microfluidic chip was heated up to 95 °C and a chosen
radiometal was injected into the system (64Cu, 300 MBq, 1 MBq/μl in
0.1 MES buffer). The free radiometal was eluted to waste, while the
chelated radiometal remained on the chip.
3rd step: The radiolabelled product was eluted from the system into
the organic phase (injection of 100 μl of EtOH).
Results: More than 90 % of the 64Cu activity was absorbed on
the chip. The radiolabelled product was then eluted with 100 μl
of EtOH in amount of 180 MBq, i.e. in the overall yield of 60 %
in ca 25 minutes. Radiochemical purity determined via HPLC was
found to be > 98 %.
Conclusion: We tested a newly designed microfluidic chip system
suitable for radiometal labellings. It was demonstrated on a particular
example of DOTA-TOC and 64Cu that the system allows for rapid
radiolabelling in three simple steps providing high radiochemical
purity product. The chip may be easily operated in GMP-compliant
mode and modified for various couples radiometal-precursor.
References
1. G. Pascali, P. Watts, and P. A. Salvadori, “Microfluidics in
radiopharmaceutical chemistry,” Nuclear Medicine and Biology, vol. 40,
no. 6, pp. 776–787, 2013.
2. M. Wang, W. Lin, K. Liu, M. Masterman-Smith, and C. K. Shen, “Microfluidics for positron emission tomography probe development,” Molecular
Imaging, vol. 9, no. 4, pp. 175–191, 2010. View at Publisher · View at Google Scholar · View at Scopus;
3. Brian M. Zeglis and Jason S. Lewis, A practical guide to the construction
of radiometallated bioconjugates for positron emission tomography
Dalton Trans. 2011 June 21; 40(23): 6168–6195. https://doi.org/10.1039/
c0dt01595d.
OP11
PET20.0: Design of a monolithic Total Body PET with 2.00 mm
spatial resolution and 20 x higher sensitivity
S. Vandenberghe1, E. Mikhaylova2, D. Borys3, V. Viswanath4, M. Stockhoff1,
N. Efthimiou5, P. Caribe1, R. Van Holen1, J. S. Karp4
1
MEDISIP research group, Ghent University, Ghent, Belgium; 2UC Davis,
Davis, CA, USA; 3Silesian University of Technology Gliwice, Gliwice,
Poland; 4PET instrumentation group, Department of Radiology,
University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA; 5University of
Hull, UK
Correspondence: S. Vandenberghe
EJNMMI Research 2018, 8(Suppl 1):OP11
Aim: The aim of this system is to simultaneously improve sensitivity and resolution with a major step compared to current stateof-the art PET while maintaining a reasonable cost for the total
system. The first aim of this study is to show the potential of
high resolution monolithic LYSO scintillator with SiPM readout for
a compact Total Body (TB) PET design with only 3-4 times the
detector material of a current PET-CT scanner. The second aim of
this study is the design of a long axial TB-PET system and the
determination of its sensitivity gains for different types of objects.
The transverse diameter of the system is fixed at 65 cm (which
fits nearly all patients) as we expect that the whole bore can be
reconstructed by making use of the Depth-of-interaction capabilities of the monolithic detector.
Methods: This system is characterised with regards to point and line
sensitivity for typical detector settings in current clinical PET systems.
In this study the effects of changing the axial length of the scanner
are studied in detail. Finally two options for imaging long objects
(above 1 m) with the same compact system are described.
Results: The system results in excellent spatial resolution at the system level. The sensitivity gains for point sources and small objects
(brain type) are limited and are comparable to the increase in cost of
Page 5 of 12
the system. For longer objects (1-2m) the gains go up to a factor 1520 x. Scanners in the range of 70 cm-1m20 match well with the typical region of interest for PET imaging and have an optimal sensitivity
gain.
Conclusion: PET20.0 combines high and uniform spatial resolution at
the system with a major increase in sensitivity (close to a factor 20)
for total body imaging. This is accomplished by increasing the detector material by a factor 3-4.
Reference
1. EANM, OP517, S. Vandenberghe, E. Mikhalyova, B. Brans, M. Defrise, T.
Lahoutte, K. Muylle, R. Van Holen, D. R. Schaart, J. S. Karp, PET 20.0: a costefficient, 2mm spatial resolution Total Body PET with point sensitivity up
to 22% and adaptive axial FOV of maximum 2.00m
OP12
Clinical validation of EARL-compliant reconstruction of digital
photon counting PET/CT: An intra-individual clinical comparison
study to conventional photomultiplier tube-based PET/CT
K. Binzel1, J. Zhang1, C. L. Wright1, P. Maniawski2, M. V. Knopp1
1
Wright Center of Innovation in Biomedical Imaging, Department of
Radiology, The Ohio State University Wexner Medical Center, Columbus,
Ohio, USA; 2Philips Healthcare, Cleveland, Ohio, USA
Correspondence: K. Binzel
EJNMMI Research 2018, 8(Suppl 1):OP12
Aim: Digital photon counting serves to improve both visual and
quantitative performance of PET/CT through advances in system sensitivity, count statistics and time of flight timing resolution. Fitting
this data to a normalization curve such as with EARL requires a
reconstruction protocol secondary to the default high definition
protocol. We validated a vendor suggested EARL-compliant protocol
for clinical data sets acquired with digital photon counting PET via
intra-individual comparison to images acquired on a conventional
system.
Methods: 26 patients underwent PET/CT imaging on a conventional
system (Philips Gemini TF 64, cPET) approximately 75 minutes
post-injection of 480 MBq 18F-FDG and 55 minutes on a precommercial release digital photon counting PET/CT system (Philips
Vereos, DPC dPET). Listmode data were reconstructed with default
settings: cPET – 4mm isometric voxel, 3 iterations, 33 subsets; DPC
dPET – 2mm isometric voxel, 3 iterations, 11 subsets, point spread
function correction and 4.1 mm Gaussian filter applied. DPC dPET
data were further reconstructed with an EARL-compliant protocol –
4mm isometric voxel, 3 iterations 13 subsets, 5mm Gaussian filter
which was previously validated with phantom data (1). Regions of
interest (ROIs) were placed over target lesions and in a variety of
background tissues for quantitative comparison.
Results: The average SUVmax of target lesions for default DPC dPET
reconstructions was 9.74. The cPET data presented a substantially
lower average SUVmax at 6.47, as anticipated due to lower recovery
coefficients. The EARL dPET reconstruction revealed quantitative
values comparable to cPET with an average SUVmax of 6.49. The decrease was due to an increase in partial volume effects by use of a
smaller reconstruction matrix/larger voxel size as well as the smoothing introduced by the use of a Gaussian filter alone. In background
tissues, the SUVmean varied by less than 5% among all reconstruction settings.
Conclusion: The EARL-compliant reconstruction of DPC dPET clinical
cases as applied to intra-individual comparison data lead to quantitative results which match conventional EARL PET/CT values. It was
demonstrated and validated that while DPC dPET imaging has substantially improved recovery coefficients, secondary reconstructions
can be performed to enable comparable quantification with conventional PET systems and existing databases or inclusion in clinical trials.
Reference
1. Koopman D, Groot Koerkamp M, Jager PL, et al. Digital PET compliance
to EARL accreditation specifications. EJNMMI Physics. 2017;4:9.
https://doi.org/10.1186/s40658-017-0176-5.
EJNMMI Research 2018, 8(Suppl 1):5
Page 6 of 12
PP01
Relationship of dual time point myocardial SPECT-CT with peak
creatine kinase and cardiac troponin I levels
P. M Haller1,2, C. Farhan3, E. Piackova1,2, B. Jäger1,2,5, P. Knoll3, A. Kiss4,
B. K. Podesser2,4, J. Wojta2,5, K. Huber1,2,6, S. Mirzaei3
1
3rd Department of Medicine, Cardiology and Intensive Care Medicine,
Chest Pain Unit, Wilhelminenhospital Vienna, Vienna, Austria; 2Ludwig
Boltzmann Cluster for Cardiovascular Research, Vienna, Austria;
3
Department of Nuclear Medicine with PET-Center, Wilhelminenhospital,
Vienna, Austria; 4Department of Biomedical Research, Medical University
of Vienna, Vienna, Austria; 5Department of Internal Medicine II, Division
of Cardiology, Medical University of Vienna, Vienna, Austria; 6Sigmund
Freud University, Medical Faculty, Vienna, Austria
Correspondence: C. Farhan
EJNMMI Research 2018, 8(Suppl 1):PP01
PP02
Visualization of Abcg2 transport activity in the liver with
[11C]erlotinib and positron emission tomography
A. Traxl1, K. Komposch2, Elisabeth Glitzner2, T. Wanek1, S. Mairinger1,
M. Sibilia2, O. Langer1,3,4
1
Center for Health & Bioresources, Biomedical Systems, AIT Austrian
Institute of Technology GmbH, Seibersdorf, Austria; 2Institute of Cancer
Research, Department of Medicine I, Comprehensive Cancer Center,
Medical University of Vienna, Vienna, Austria; 3Department of Clinical
Pharmacology, Medical University of Vienna, Vienna, Austria;
4
Department of Biomedical Imaging and Image-Guided Therapy,
Division of Nuclear Medicine, Medical University of Vienna, Vienna,
Austria
Correspondence: A. Traxl
EJNMMI Research 2018, 8(Suppl 1):PP02
Aim: The aim of this sub-study of a randomized clinical trial was
to evaluate the relationship of peak creatine kinase (CK) and
peak sensitive cardiac Troponin I (sc-TnI) levels with perfusion
defect and left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF) by gated
single-photon emission computed tomography myocardial perfusion
imaging (SPECT-MPI) in patients with ST-elevation myocardial infarction
(STEMI) undergoing primary percutaneous coronary intervention (pPCI)
during the acute phase and one month later.
Methods: Patients who were admitted with STEMI within 8 hours
of symptom onset underwent gated SPECT-MPI acquisition
(SPECT-LDCT, Siemens Symbia T6, Erlangen) within 24 hours (timepoint (TP) 1) after pPCI and one month later (TP 2). The MPI SPECT data
were reconstructed and analyzed using 4DM-SPECT software. The infarct size was defined as percentage of the total left ventricular myocardium (%LV). Serial CK (U/L) und sc-TnI (μg/L) levels were
evaluated at presentation and 2, 6, 12, 24 and 48 hours after
pPCI, respectively. Both, peak NT-proBNP (ng/L) values and LVEF
in ECHO were assessed during day 2 and 5 after admission.
Results: Twenty-four consecutive patients (mean age 60±12 years,
8 females) were included in this analysis. All patients had TIMI 3
flow in the culprit vessel after pPCI. In total 19 patients
underwent SPECT on TP1 and 17 on TP2. The median perfusion
defect was significantly larger on TP1 compared to TP2 (34%LV
(IQR 16-54) vs. 16%LV (IQR 4-22), p=0.008). We found significant
correlations for peak sc-TnI and peak CK levels with the perfusion
defect assessed on TP1 (r=0.5, p=0.031; r=0.51, p=0.026; respectively)
and on TP2 (r=0.88, p<0.001; r=0.92, p<0.001, respectively). Nt-proBNP
values did not significantly correlate with the perfusion defect on either
TP1 or TP2 (r=0.486, p=0.056; r=0.329, p=0.297), respectively. However,
we found good correlations for LVEF between ECHO and SPECT
assessment at TP1 and TP2 (r=0.7, p=0.005 and r=0.68, p=0.007).
Conclusion: The results of this pilot study demonstrate a significant
correlation between infarct size assessed by use of SPECT-MPI and
peak values of the more specific cardiac biomarkers CK and sc-TnI.
This correlation was much higher one month compared to 24 hours
after pPCI. LVEF calculated with SPECT-MPI showed good correlation
to echocardiography irrespective of the TP. However, Nt-proBNP, a
marker of left ventricular function, was not correlated with infarct size,
which might be explained by stunning of potentially vital myocardium.
Aim: Breast cancer resistance protein (Abcg2) is an ATP-binding
cassette transporter and expressed in the canalicular (bile-facing)
membrane of hepatocytes, where it promotes hepatobiliary excretion of diverse drugs and their metabolites. Inter-individual variability in hepatic Abcg2 transport activity may affect the safety
and efficacy of drugs excreted via hepatic Abcg2 from the body.
We have shown before that the radiolabeled tyrosine kinase inhibitor [11C]erlotinib undergoes in mice Abcg2-mediated hepatobiliary excretion, suggesting an utility to measure the transport
activity of Abcg2 in the liver [1]. Aim of this study was to investigate if [11C]erlotinib PET is sensitive enough to measure a reduction of Abcg2 expression in the liver using a transgenic mouse
model, in which the epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) was
cell-type specifically deleted in hepatocytes of the liver leading to
a down-regulation of Abcg2.
Methods: Healthy male EGFR∆hep mice (lacking EGFR in hepatocytes
of the liver, n = 5) and EGFRfl/fl mice (having normal EGFR expression in hepatocytes of the liver, n = 6) underwent an MR scan
followed by a 90-min dynamic PET scan after intravenous injection of
[11C]erlotinib. Concentration-time curves were derived for different
organs from the co-registered PET/MR images and the area under
the curve (AUC) from 0-90 min was calculated. Integration plot analysis was used to estimate the rate constant for transfer of radioactivity from the liver via bile into the intestine (kbile). Abcg2 protein
expression levels in liver tissue collected at the end of PET imaging
were determined with Western blot analysis.
Results: Western blot analysis revealed a significant reduction (-65%) of
hepatic Abcg2 protein expression levels in EGFR∆hep mice relative to
EGFRfl/fl mice. Intestinal AUC and kbile values were significantly lower
in EGFR∆hep as compared with EGFRfl/fl mice (intestine AUC, EGFRfl/fl:
1,340 ± 368 %ID/g*min, EGFR∆hep: 866 ± 86 %ID/g*min; kbile, EGFRfl/
fl: 0.018 ± 0.003 min-1, EGFR∆hep: 0.006 ± 0.002 min-1).
Conclusion: Our findings suggest that [11C]erlotinib PET is suitable to
measure a reduction in Abcg2 expression in the liver. Thus, [11C]erlotinib PET may be used to study the influence of liver disease, genetic
polymorphisms or drugs on hepatic Abcg2 transport activity.
Reference
1. Traxl et al. J Nucl Med. 2015 Dec;56(12):1930-6.
References
1. Byrne RA, Ndrepepa G, Braun S, Tiroch K, Mehilli J, Schulz S, Schömig A,
Kastrati A. Peak cardiac troponin-T level, scintigraphic myocardial infarct
size and one-year prognosis in patients undergoing primary percutaneous coronary intervention for acute myocardial infarction. Am J Cardiol.
2010 Nov 1;106(9):1212-7.
2. Arruda-Olson AM, Roger VL, Jaffe AS, Hodge DO, Gibbons RJ, Miller TD.
Troponin T levels and infarct size by SPECT myocardial perfusion imaging.
JACC Cardiovasc Imaging. 2011 May;4(5):523-33.
PP03
Role of 18F-FDG PET in differentiation of Portal Malignant
Thrombus from Bland Thrombus in patient with Hepatocellular
carcinoma (HCC): a case report
M. C.Fornito1, M. Russello2, G. Russo3, R. Balzano1
1
Nuclear Medicine Department PET/TC Center ARNAS Garibaldi, Catania,
Italy; 2Liver Unit ARNAS Garibaldi, Catania, Italy; 3H.Pharmacy Department
ARNAS Garibaldi, Catania, Italy
Correspondence: M. C. Fornito
EJNMMI Research 2018, 8(Suppl 1):PP03
EJNMMI Research 2018, 8(Suppl 1):5
Aim: Portal neoplastic thrombus, present in 6.5%-44% of patients
with HCC, represents an important determinant of tumor staging
and prognosis and influences treatment selection.HCC invasion
into the portal vein renders a patient unsuitable for aggressive
treatment such as surgical resection, liver transplantation or
chemoembolization, due the high incidence of tumor recurrence.
The standard for characterizing portal vein thrombus is histopathologic examination; in clinical practice others diagnostic imaging,
clinical and laboratory findings are often utilized for discrimination. We report a case of a 63 yrs male affected by HBV
cirrhosis and biopsy-proven multifocal HCC treated ten months
with Sorafenib.He showed a good response to the disappearance
of liver lesion and reduction of AFP value but the CT found a
portal thrombus suspected as neoplastic that would make the
patient unsuitable to the programmed liver transplantation.Diagnostic imaging as US, enhanced US and CT were not diagnostic.
No MRI was performed for the presence of foreign metallic bullet.
The patient was referred to 18F-FDG PET/CT for an accurate
differentiation of bland from neoplastic thrombus, basing on the
data published and considering the presence of a highly metabolic pattern in malignant vein thrombosis.
Methods: Data acquisitions by an integrated PET/CT system (Philips
Gemini XLC) were performed within 60 min after 216 MBq of 18FFDG. A late liver image was registered.
Results: The 18F-FDG PET/CT showed a high uptake in the main
portal vein (SUV max 3.97) which increased in the late acquisition.Liver SUV was 2.45 and aortic SUV was 1.78. It is reported
that in PET/CT thrombi were considered malignant if the SUV is
greater than normal liver and/or the uptake is greater than that
of the descending aorta in the same axial slice with an optimal
cutoff value of SUV max 2.3-3.6. In our case the SUV value was
consistent with malignant vein thrombosis. Considering that
shrinkage of the thrombus and/or recanalization of the vessels
was a definitive evidence of the benign nature of the thrombosis,
the patient was followed-up monthly by US, CT and AFP value.
After four months the enhanced CT showed an enlargement of the
thrombus and parenchymal infiltration consistent with malignancy.
Conclusion: 18F-FDG PET/CT may be helpful in discriminating
between benign and malignant portal vein thrombi. Patients may
benefit from 18F-FDG PET/CT when portal vein thrombi cannot be diagnosed exactly by US, CT or when MRI isn’t feasible.
Consent to publish: Consent to publish was obtained from the
patient involved in this study
References
1. Surasi DS, O'Malley JP, Bhambhvani P, J Nucl Med Technol 2015
Sep;43(3):229-30
2. Hu S,Zhang J, Cheng C, Liu Q, Sun G, Zuo C. Abdom Imaging 2014 Dec;
39(6):1221-7
PP04
Lenvatinib-therapy for patients with radioiodine-refractory
differentiated thyroid cancer – our experiences with Lenvima® at
the Department of Nuclear Medicine and Endocrinology in
Klagenfurt, Austria
S. Sorko, H. J. Gallowitsch, S. Kohlfuerst, S. Matschnig, M. Rieser, M.
Sorschag, P. Lind
Department of Nuclear Medicine and Endocrinology, PET/CT Center,
Klinikum Klagenfurt, Klagenfurt, Austria
Correspondence: S. Sorko
EJNMMI Research 2018, 8(Suppl 1):PP04
This abstract is not included here as it has already been
published [1].
Reference
[1] Stefan Sorko, Hans-Juergen Gallowitsch, Susanne Kohlfuerst, et al. “Lenvatinib-therapy for patients with radioiodine-refractory differentiated
thyroid cancer - our experiences with Lenvima® at the department of
nuclear medicine and endocrinology in Klagenfurt, Austria.” Eur Thyroid J
2017;6(suppl 1):102.
Page 7 of 12
PP05
The influence of attenuation correction and acquisition time on
the SPECT image quality
L. Ležaič1 S. Rep1, J. Žibert2, N. Frelih1, S. Šuštar1
1
Departments of Nuclear Medicine, University Medical Centre Ljubljana,
Ljubljana, Slovenia; 2Faculty of Health Sciences, University of Ljubljana,
Ljubljana, Slovenia
Correspondence: S. Šuštar
EJNMMI Research 2018, 8(Suppl 1):PP05
Aim: The aim of this article is to find out how the attenuation correction in the case of the SPECT/CT imaging influences the quality of
the image, and also the effect of different acquisition time.
Methods: The Phantom NEMA IEC BodyPhantom was filled with the
isotope technetium-99m. Eight images were captured, each with a
different ratio of the specific activity between the phantom background and the spheres and also different acquisition time. The images were reconstructed in the program called Oasis by three
different reconstructions: the filtered back projection, the noncorrected iterative reconstruction, and with the attenuation correction using the CT. The number of counts in the background and in
all six spheres was measured. This was followed by the comparison
of the contrast in images that were reconstructed using different
methods. A descriptive statistic and repeated ANOVA measure were
conducted. The Wilcoxon signed-rank test was carried out in Matlab.
Results: On the images that were processed by the filtered back
projection or the iterative reconstruction, the background is not homogeneous. On the images that were corrected using the CT, the number
of counts is evenly spread across the entire background of the phantom, thus making the background homogeneous. The statistical analysis showed that p < 0.001, meaning that, statistically, contrast is
typically divergent among the different methods of reconstruction.
Conclusion: It was discovered that the increase in the number of
counts, and consequently the image contrast, is proportional to the size
of the sphere, and to the increased ratio of activity between the background and the sphere with all three types of reconstruction. The CTAC images have the best contrast; images with iterative reconstruction
are second best; images processed by the filtered back projection are
third. The images reconstructed with the CT-AC have the least negative
contrast, while the negative contrast in the images with iterative reconstruction and FBP images is far more prominent. Also increased imaging time results in increased count number and better image quality.
Because the CT-AC images are of better quality than the non-corrected
images, it is recommended that the CT-AC be used for all tests; however due to the removal of artefacts caused by attenuation correction,
it is also important to examine the non-corrected images every time.
References
1. Grosser O S, Kupitz D, Ruf J et al. (2015). Optimization of SPECT-CT Hybrid
Imaging Using Iterative Image Reconstruction for Low-Dose CT: A Phantom Study. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0138658.
2. James A Patton, Timothy G Turkington (2008). SPECT/CT Physical
Principles and Attenuation Correction. J Nucl Med Technol 36: 1–10.
3. Magdy M K Ed. (2011). Basic Sciences of Nuclear Medicine. London: Springer.
PP06
Optimization of high definition digital PET/CT reconstruction for
neurologic imaging
K. Binzel1, A. Adelaja1, C. L. Wright1, D. Scharre2, J. Zhang1, M. V. Knopp1
1
Wright Center of Innovation in Biomedical Imaging, Department of
Radiology, The Ohio State University Wexner Medical Center, Columbus,
OH, USA; 2Department of Neurology, The Ohio State University Wexner
Medical Center, Columbus, OH, USA
Correspondence: K. Binzel
EJNMMI Research 2018, 8(Suppl 1):PP06
Aim: Digital photon counting allows for higher definition image reconstruction than on conventional PET systems due to increased system sensitivity, time of flight timing resolution, and count densities
(1). For neurologic applications, these improvements may greatly increase the utility and accuracy of PET imaging. We validated and
EJNMMI Research 2018, 8(Suppl 1):5
Page 8 of 12
optimized high definition image reconstruction methodologies using
the Hoffman brain phantom.
Methods: A Hoffman brain phantom was filled with 52 MBq 18F-FDG
and imaged on a pre-commercial release digital photon counting
PET/CT (Philips Vereos). Five minute acquisitions were repeated over
several runs using the dedicated brain 256 mm field of view (FOV)
and the whole body 576 mm FOV. Listmode data from each acquisition was reconstructed using the high definition (HD) 2x2x2 mm
voxel matrix. Reconstructions were performed with 3 iterations and a
range of subsets, 21, 17, 13, and 9. Additionally, the use of system
point spread function (PSF) correction and/or a Gaussian filter were
enabled. Regions of interest (ROIs) were placed in 10 unique regions
of the phantom for quantitative assessment. Blinded reader reviews
were performed to assess image quality.
Results: We found that the optimal reconstruction settings for each
FOV were distinct. For the 576 mm FOV the use of PSF alone, no
Gaussian filter, gave the most accurate quantitative results. The
addition of the Gaussian filter resulted in underestimation of activity
concentrations. The average recovery coefficients (RCs) of all ROIs
were very similar among reconstructions with different numbers of
subsets. The average RCs were 0.97, 0.95, 0.94, and 0.92 for the 21,
17, 13, and 9 subsets reconstructions, respectively. Blinded review
conveyed that the 13 subset images were most preferable with
regard to contrast and image noise. Thus the HD reconstruction with
PSF only using 3 iterations and 13 subsets was optimal for the whole
body FOV acquisitions. For the 256 mm FOV a Gaussian filter was
used in reconstruction as the PSF alone lead to overestimation of activity concentrations. As with the whole body FOV, each subset setting gave similar quantitative results, average RCs were 1.02, 1.01,
0.98, and 0.95 for the 21, 17, 13, and 9 subset reconstructions. Image
review again showed that fewer subsets were preferred, with the 9
subset reconstruction now being most ideal. For acquisitions with
the dedicated brain FOV, HD reconstruction with both PSF correction
and a Gaussian filter using 3 iterations with 9 subsets is optimal for
imaging with FDG.
Conclusion: Optimization of Neuro-PET reconstruction settings revealed that these setting must be tailored to acquisition characteristics, namely the chosen field of view. Phantom validation
demonstrated that high quantitative accuracy and excellent image
quality is readily achieved for neurologic imaging on next-generation
digital PET systems when using either a dedicated brain field of view
or the wider whole body field of view.
(1), suppressing the gland metabolism appears to be a promising
method to achieve a lower uptake. Because of its safety and feasibility, injection of botulinum toxin into the salivary glands is commonly
used to treat severe sialorrhoea (even in children) and has already
been investigated as a potential radioprotective agent in EBRT (2).
Methods: A 63-year-old patient with mCRPC received multifocal
ultrasound-guided injections of botulinum toxin A, totally 80 units,
into his right parotid gland after a detailed informed consent. A
dynamic salivary gland scintigraphy (SGS) using Tc-99m pertechnetate was performed before and after 70 h. At 45 days p.i., SGS
as well as Ga-68-PSMA-PET/CT were performed. Standardized uptake values (SUV) of the right and left parotid glands were compared to the baseline PET/CT study. The patient underwent
regular clinical follow up.
Results: Ga-68-PSMA-PET/CT performed 45 days after the botulinum
toxin injection showed a heterogeneous, but highly significant reduction of the radioligand uptake by up to 60 % (SUVmean) in the
injected right-sided parotid gland as compared to the left one. There
was a drop of the SUVmean in the right parotid gland by up to 64
%, whereas no significant change in uptake of the left parotid gland
was noted, when compared to the baseline PET/CT. The SGS also revealed a distinct decline in the peak uptake of Tc-99m pertechnetate
in the injected parotid gland. The patient didn’t report any adverse
effects of the injections throughout the follow-up period of now up
to 2 months.
Conclusion: Intraparenchymal botulinum toxin injection impressively
decreases the uptake of PSMA radioligands in the salivary glands.
Therefore this approach (named 4B protection), which is described
here for the very first time and was pioneered by our group, could
be a significant breakthrough for salivary gland protection under
PSMA radioligand therapy.
Reference
1. Wright CL, Binzel K, Zhang J, Knopp MV. Advanced Functional Tumor
Imaging and Precision Nuclear Medicine Enabled by Digital PET
Technologies. Contrast Media & Molecular Imaging. 2017;2017:5260305.
https://doi.org/10.1155/2017/5260305.
PP08
Assessment of renal scars and differential renal function (DRF) in
children with ureteral reflux: Tc 99m L-ethylenedicysteine dynamic
scan vs Tc 99m DMSA static scan
M. C. Fornito1, S. Cacciaguerra2, R. Balzano1, G. V. Di Martino1, G. Russo3
1
Nuclear Medicine Department Arnas Garibaldi, Catania, Italy; 2Pediatric
Surgery Arnas Garibaldi, Catania, Italy; 3Pharmacy H. Department Arnas
Garibaldi, Catania, Italy
Correspondence: M. C. Fornito
EJNMMI Research 2018, 8(Suppl 1):PP08
PP07
Injection of botulinum toxin for preventing salivary gland toxicity
after PSMA-Radio-Ligand-Therapy - an empiric proof of concept
for the future
R. P. Baum1#, T. Langbein1#, A. Singh1, M. Shahinfar1, C. Schuchardt1,
G. F. Volk2, H. R. Kulkarni1
1
Theranostics Center for Molecular Radiotherapy and Molecular
ImagZentralklinik Bad Berka, Bad Berka, Germany; 2Department of
Otorhinolaryngology, Jena University Hospital, Jena, Germany
Correspondence: R. P. Baum; T. Langbein
EJNMMI Research 2018, 8(Suppl 1):PP07
#
authorship equally shared/equally contributed
Aim: The potential dose-limiting toxicity - especially when using
alpha-emitters like Ac-225- or Bi-213, remains an unresolved issue in
PSMA radioligand therapy (PRLT) of metastatic castration-resistant
prostate cancer (mCRPC) due to the normal biodistribution of PSMAradioligands in the salivary as well as in the lacrimal glands. Experience from over decades in external beam radiotherapy (EBRT) of the
head and neck region demonstrates that severe xerostomia could
become a life-quality-limiting factor. Since recent studies suggest a
more PSMA-independent uptake in the salivary and lacrimal glands
References
1. Kratochwil C, Bruchertseifer F, Rathke H, et al. Targeted alpha therapy of
mCRPC with 225Actinium-PSMA-617: dosimetry estimate and empirical
dose finding. J Nucl Med. April 13, 2017 [Epub ahead of print].
2. Teymoortash A, Pfestroff A, Wittig A, Franke N, Hoch S, Harnisch S, et al.
Safety and Efficacy of Botulinum Toxin to Preserve Gland Function after
Radiotherapy in Patients with Head and Neck Cancer: A Prospective,
Randomized, Placebo-Controlled, Double-Blinded Phase I Clinical Trial.
PLoS One. 2016 Mar 18;11(3) eCollection 2016
Aim: 99mTc-dimercaptosuccinic acid (DMSA) is an agent used for the
diagnosis and follow-up of renal scarring in children with ureteral reflux detecting scars and calculating the differential renal function
(DRF). DMSA has some disadvantages such as relatively higher radiation dose and time consumption. Recently a new radiopharmaceutical Tc-99m-ethylenedicysteine (EC) has been developed for dynamic
scintigraphy and to measure renal function as an alternative to OIH
and Tc-99m-MAG3, with comparable characteristics. EC provides
high-quality images and low radiation dose. The purpose of this
study was to evaluate the effectiveness of EC scan compared with
DMSA in the detection of cortical lesions and DRF in order to perform only one scan with the advantage in terms of economy and
health care.
Methods: 20 children 0.2-2 years with ureteral reflux (III and IV) were
studied with DMSA and EC performed within 20-45 days. DMSA was
acquired 3-4 hours after i.v. injection (EAMN paediatric guidelines)
with 8 views (A/P, OP, PA and LL) by Philips Bright View XCT, LEHR
collimator, 256 matrix, 300 kcounts/view. EC was performed with
EJNMMI Research 2018, 8(Suppl 1):5
both detectors using the same equipment and recording dynamic
anterior/posterior images after bolus in a 64 matrix for 30 minutes.
First 180sec. images were summed in statics images in AP views.
Perirenal ROI’s were drawn automatically for uptake and background
and DRF was calculated. All images were also evaluated visually to
define parenchymal abnormalities. All patients underwent to external
dose rate measurements to evaluate the total decay constant (physical + biological).
Results: EC provided high-quality images even in newborns with a
low/negligible extra-renal clearance, low liver and intestinal activity
and high kidney-to-background ratio similar to DMSA, good delineation of the kidneys and detection of renal scars. DFR calculated and
compared for both agents showed a close correlation (r =0.979) between values obtained by the two different methods.The qualitative
analysis from DMSA and EC revealed 22 and 18 focal defects respectively; four defects were not detected on EC summed image (22,3%)
possibly because the only A/P views, the lower counts and the
higher pixel size of dynamic acquisition.
Conclusion: DMSA-scan is the gold standard test for parenchymal
abnormalities and for the DRF. Ours preliminary results show that
EC images provide an accurate DRF calculation and detection of
scars in children with reflux. The absorbed radiation dose for EC
is lower than DMSA and represents an advantage in pediatrics.
Further studies are needed to determine if EC scans could be
used alone to assess cortical lesions and DRF in selected cases.
More cases are necessary to obtain a more accurate dosimetric
evaluation.
For the study, the approval of the local ethics committee was not necessary as both the radiopharmaceuticals, (Tc 99m L-ethylenedicysteine and s Tc 99m DMSa) are regularly registered for diagnostic use
in Italy. In addition, the patients used in the evaluation were chosen
from all those who performed the diagnostic test for clinical reasons
and requested from them reference specialist urologist.
References
1. Vallabhajousula S. et al. j of Nucl Med vol 30. N5 May 1989
2. Domingues F.C. et al Int Braz J urol. 2006;32:405-0
PP09
A New Program for the Optimisation of Mo99-Tc99m Generator
Selection
W. H. Thomson
Physics and Nuclear Medicine, City Hospital, Birmingham UK
EJNMMI Research 2018, 8(Suppl 1):PP09
Aim: Generator costs are expected to rise significantly in the next few
years. This is due to issues around reactor closures and future supplies
being based on full cost recovery. Optimising the regular supply of
Mo99 generators is almost impossible to do by trial and error, particularly for larger radiopharmacies getting two generators a week. Even
single generator use departments face problems since all the manufacturers have different delivery schedules and reference activities. I developed an EXCEL program 6 years ago which analysed all generators on
the UK market to match a departments requirements. This program
has had to be fully re-written for various factors described.
Methods: The generator range on the UK/EC market has significantly
expanded. In 2012 there were N = 112 different generators available
(from 3 manufacturers), but in 2017 there are now N = 303 different
generators,(from 4 manufacturers).. When both single generator and
2 generator usage is considered the number of possible options of
generator supply are [N*(N-1)]/2+2N. So the number of combinations
has risen from 6,440 to 46,359. The old program could not accommodate this number of generators. Also, the calculation algorithms of
the old program with this increase in numbers would take over
40minutes.
Results: The program has been completely rewritten, with the
following -
Manufacturers’ generators can occupy separate worksheets.
These individual worksheets are now separately selectable
(included or excluded)
Page 9 of 12
Calculation of each generator Tc99m activity is automatic (this
significantly aids data entry)
Generators are pre-populated for major manufacturers so only
the local costs are entered.
7day or 14day generator use is user selectable.
Results are sorted in order of increasing cost, so usually only
the first batch of results need to be reviewed.
However the major change is the processing algorithm, which now
takes 840,000 combinations and take only 6seconds.
Conclusion: The program will be described (and possibly presented).
It is impossible to maximise the supply using trial and error, particularly for 2 generators a week, and there is a potential for cost savings
to be made from optimising the generator supply.
Reference
1. W. H. Thomson et al. “EXCEL programs to optimise the cost and choice
of generator schedules for radiopharmacies and to provide daily Tc99m
activity information”. presented at the 2012 “Radioactive Isotopes in
Molecular Imaging - 30th International Austrian winter symposium”
PP10
Interdisciplinary preoperative management of thyroid patients and
thyroid cancer incidence
M. Kudlacek1, M. Karik2, C. Farhan1, H. Rieger3, W. Pokieser3, K. Glaser2,
S. Mirzaei1
1
Institute of Nuclear Medicine with PET-Center, Wilhelminenspital,
Vienna, Austria; 2Department of Viceral and General Surgery,
Wilhelminenspital, Vienna, Austria; 3Institute of Pathology and
Microbiology, Wilhelminenspital, Vienna, Austria
Correspondence: M. Kudlacek
EJNMMI Research 2018, 8(Suppl 1):PP10
Aim: The increase in incidence of thyroid cancer during the last
decades (about 2% of new cancer cases in Austria) without concomitant rise in mortality may reflect the growing detection of
indolent forms of thyroid cancer. Our aim was to analyze the cancer
statistics of our patients who underwent surgery in the time period of
2012-2016..
Methods: In the time period of 2012-2016 a total number of 636
patients (473 f, 166 m, age range 12-92y, median age 52 + 13,83y)
were sent after decision making in thyroid board, consisted of
nuclear medicine, surgery, pathology and ear-nose-throat (ENT)
specialists. All surgical specimens were examined at the department
for pathology in our hospital. Preoperative examination included
sonography of thyroid gland and lymphatic tissue, scintigraphy, fine
needle aspiration cytology in case of clinically suspect nodules,
otolaryngological examination and laboratory analysis including
Calcitonin if nodules were present.
Results: The temporal analysis of our patients in the time period of
2012-2016 revealed 135 cancer cases with following histological
diagnosis:
54 PTC, 13FTC, 7 MTC, 1 anaplastic cancer, 1 metastasis of a renal
cancer. 59 were staged as pT1a (6 pT1a(m) > 5mm, 1 tall-cell variant
> 5mm with lymph vessel involvement and 2 with lymph node metastasis) and 26 patients with > pT1a had LN metastasis, and 2
showed distant metastasis at the time of diagnosis.
The annual incidence (%) of thyroid cancer (TC) was as in the following Table 2.
Conclusion: We observed a high cancer incidence of about 21%
in our patients compared to the low rate of 2% thyroid cancer
patients of new cancer cases in Austria. To our opinion a
stringent patient selection in the interdisciplinary preoperative
management of thyroid patients according to guidelines is the
decisive factor for this high rate of thyroid cancer in our
patients.
References
1. Austrian Thyroid Association: Modifizierte ATA-Empfehlungen zur Abklärung von Schilddrüsenknoten und Behandlung des differenzierten
Schilddrüsenkarzinoms
EJNMMI Research 2018, 8(Suppl 1):5
Page 10 of 12
Table 2 (abstract PP10). See text for description
Year
(f)
(m)
Total
2012
17
6
14
2013
20
17
19
2014
18
31
21
2015
22
9
19
2016
31
27
30
PP11
Ultrasound criteria for risk stratification of thyroid nodules in the
previously iodine deficient area of Austria. A single centre,
retrospective analysis
V. Petz1, C. Tugendsam1, W. Buchinger2, B. Schmoll-Hauer1,3,
I. P. Schenk1,4, K. Rudolph1, M. Krebs1,5, G. Zettinig1
1
Schilddruesenpraxis Josefstadt, Vienna, Austria; 2Schilddrueseninstitut
Gleisdorf, Gleisdorf, Austria; 3Department of Nuclear Medicine,
Krankenanstalt Rudolfstiftung, Vienna, Austria; 4Department of Nuclear
Medicine, Sozialmedizinisches Zentrum Hietzing, Vienna, Austria; 5Clinical
Division of Endocrinology, Department of Medicine III, Medical
University of Vienna, Vienna, Austria
EJNMMI Research 2018, 8(Suppl 1):PP11
Aim: We aimed to study the validity of six published ultrasound
criteria for risk stratification of thyroid nodules in the former severely
iodine deficient population of Austria.
Methods: Retrospective, single centre, observer blinded study design.
All patients with a history of thyroidectomy due to nodules seen in
the centre between 2004 and 2014 with preoperative in-house sonography and documented postoperative histology were analyzed
(n=195). A board of five experienced thyroidologists evaluated the
images of 45 papillary carcinomas, 8 follicular carcinomas, and 142
benign nodules regarding the following criteria: mild hypoechogenicity, marked hypoechogenicity, microlobulated or irregular margins,
microcalcifications, taller than wide shape, missing thin halo.
Results: All criteria but mild hypoechogenicity were significantly
more frequent in thyroid cancer than in benign nodules. The number
of positive criteria was significantly higher in cancer (2.79±1.35) than
in benign nodules (1.73±1.18; p<0.001). Thus, with a cut-off of two or
more positive criteria, a sensitivity of 85% and a specificity of 45%
were reached to predict malignancy in this sample of thyroid nodules. As expected, the findings were even more pronounced in
papillary cancer only (2.98±1.32 vs. 1.73±1.18, p<0.001). The six ultrasound criteria could not identify follicular cancer.
Conclusion: Our findings support the recently published EU-TIRADS
score. Apart from mild hypoechogenicity, the analyzed ultrasound
criteria can be applied for risk stratification of thyroid nodules in the
previously severely iodine deficient population of Austria.
PP12
Evaluation of cerebral P-glycoprotein function in an Alzheimer’s
disease mouse model with positron emission tomography
V. Zoufal1, T. Wanek1, M. Krohn2, S. Mairinger1, J. Stanek1,3, M. Sauberer1,
T. Filip1, J. Pahnke2, O. Langer1,3
1
Center for Health & Bioresources, AIT Austrian Institute of Technology
GmbH, Seibersdorf, Austria; 2Department of Neuro-/Pathology, University
of Oslo (UiO) and Oslo University Hospital (OUS), Oslo, Norway;
3
Department of Clinical Pharmacology, Medical University of Vienna,
Vienna, Austria
Correspondence: V. Zoufal
EJNMMI Research 2018, 8(Suppl 1):PP12
Aim: P-glycoprotein (Pgp), a membrane transporter expressed at the
blood-brain barrier (BBB), may contribute to clearance of betaamyloid (Aß) from the brain [1, 2]. Positron emission tomography
(PET) with the Pgp substrate (R)-[11C]verapamil ([11C]VPM) has
shown that cerebral Pgp function is reduced in Alzheimer’s disease
(AD) patients and during healthy ageing [3, 4]. Transgenic mouse
models are commonly used in AD research. It is currently not known
if [11C]VPM PET possesses adequate sensitivity to detect a moderate
reduction in Pgp function at the BBB as it occurs in AD mouse
models. In the present study, we employed a novel partial Pgp inhibition protocol using tariquidar [4] to assess Pgp function with
[11C]VPM PET in one commonly employed AD mouse model
(APPPS1 mice) and in age-matched wild-type mice.
Methods: Female C57BL/6N wild-type and APPPS1 mice aged 50
days and 200 days underwent dynamic [11C]VPM PET scans after
pre-treatment with vehicle or the Pgp inhibitor tariquidar at a dose
of 4 mg/kg leading to partial Pgp inhibition at the BBB (n = 4 - 6). In
addition, heterozygous Pgp knockout mice (Abcb1a/b(+/-)) were
studied as a model of 50% reduction in Pgp density at the BBB. At
the end of the PET scan a venous blood sample was collected by
retro-orbital puncture. Brain uptake of [11C]VPM was expressed
as the brain-to-plasma ratio of radioactivity in the last PET
frame (Kp,brain). Plasma was analyzed by radio-TLC for radiolabeled metabolites of [11C]VPM. Immunohistochemical (IHC)
staining was performed to visualize the spatial distribution of
Pgp in the brain.
Results: In PET scans without Pgp inhibition, Kp,brain values of
[11C]VPM were not significantly different between all mouse groups.
Administration of tariquidar led to increases in Kp,brain values, which
differed among groups with the following rank order: wild-type 50
days: +23 ± 10%, APPPS1 50 days: +31 ± 14%, wild-type 200
days: +31 ± 11%, APPPS1 200 days: +39 ± 23%, Abcb1a/b(+/-): +59 ±
6%. After tariquidar administration, Kp,brain values were significantly
higher in wild-type mice aged 200 days than 50 days (1.02 ± 0.10 vs.
0.90 ± 0.11, p = 0.04, Student’s t-test). In addition, higher Kp,brain
values were detected in APPPS1 mice aged 50 days compared to
wild-type mice aged 50 days (1.09 ± 0.07 vs. 0.90 ± 0.11, p = 0.01). In
Abcb1a/b(+/-) mice, Kp,brain values after tariquidar administration
(1.32 ± 0.11) were significantly higher than in wild-type and
APPPS1 mice from both age groups. No differences in the percentage of radiolabeled metabolites of [11C]VPM in plasma were
observed between wild-type and APPPS1 mice. IHC analysis of
brain slices confirmed reduced Pgp expression in brain capillaries
of APPPS1 mice as compared with wild-type mice.
Conclusion: Our data confirm previous findings that [11C]VPM PET
without inhibitor administration lacks the sensitivity to detect moderate changes in Pgp function at the BBB [4]. We obtained evidence
that [11C]VPM PET in combination with partial Pgp inhibition with
tariquidar can be used to detect age- and AD-related reductions in
Pgp function at the BBB of mice. The employed PET protocol may
prove useful in future studies evaluating different therapeutic approaches to restore Pgp function at the BBB.
References
1. Mawuenyega KG, Sigurdson W, Ovod V, Munsell L, Kasten T, Morris JC,
et al. Decreased clearance of CNS beta-amyloid in Alzheimer's disease.
Science 2010;330:1774.
2. Cirrito JR, Deane R, Fagan AM, Spinner ML, Parsadanian M, Finn MB, et al.
P-glycoprotein deficiency at the blood-brain barrier increases amyloidbeta deposition in an Alzheimer disease mouse model. J Clin Invest
2005;115:3285-90.
3. Deo AK, Borson S, Link JM, Domino K, Eary JF, Ke B, et al. Activity of Pglycoprotein, a beta-amyloid transporter at the blood-brain barrier, is
compromised in patients with mild Alzheimer disease. J Nucl Med
2014;55:1106-11.
4. Bauer M, Wulkersdorfer B, Karch R, Philippe C, Jager W, Stanek J, et al.
Effect of P-glycoprotein inhibition at the blood-brain barrier on brain distribution of (R)-[11 C]verapamil in elderly versus young subjects. Br J Clin
Pharmacol 2017;83:1991-9.
PP13
The curious fever: The diagnostic value of 18F-FDG in FUO in a
large single-center retrospective study on 300 patients
F. Weitzer, B. Pernthaler, S. Salamon, R. Aigner
Meduni Graz, Univ. Klinik für Radiologie, Abteilung für Nuklearmedizin,
Graz, Austria
Correspondence: F. Weitzer
EJNMMI Research 2018, 8(Suppl 1):PP13
EJNMMI Research 2018, 8(Suppl 1):5
Aim: 18F-FDG PET/CT has been described as a helpful diagnostic tool
in FUO (fever of unknown origin) when other radiological or laboratory methods fail to explain the fever origin. We present preliminary
results from a large single-center retrospective study on the diagnostic value of 18F-FDG PET/CT in FUO.
Methods: We included 143 patients (65 male 45%; 78 female 55%)
who presented with a history of FUO. Microbiological and histological findings, patient follow-up and further treatment were retrospectively correlated to PET/CT findings.
Results: In 109 (76.2%) cases, PET/CT findings correlated positively
with the final diagnosis, while in 17 (11.9%) cases the PET/CT findings
only partially correlated with the final diagnosis. In 17 (11.9%) cases
PET/CT findings were false-positive. In 56 (39.2%) cases PET/CT
showed no focus.
In in 43 cases (30.1%) fever was caused by various infectious diseases;
in 22 cases (15.4%) fever was a sign of malignoma; in 21 cases (14.7%),
fever was caused by autoimmune or rheumatic diseases; in 6 cases
(4.2%) miscellanceous diseases were reported. In 28 cases (19.6%) no
underlying disease could be found.
In 23 (16.1%) cases a plausible cause for fever was previously known,
PET/CT was performed to outrule another infectious or malignant source,
in this cases PET/CT showed no other focus or signs of malignancy.
Conclusion: 18F-FDG PET/CT is the gold standard in FUO diagnostics
in nuclear medicine, particularly when other radiological and laboratory methods fail to provide an explanation for FUO. Our study
delivers important data for the use of 18F-FDG-PET/CT in FUO, since
there is still a lack of large studies to support this hypothesis.
References
1. Schönau V, Vogel K, Englbrecht M, Wacker J, Schmidt D, Manger B, et al.
The value of 18F-FDG-PET/CT in identifying the cause of fever of unknown
origin (FUO) and inflammation of unknown origin (IUO): data from a
prospective study. Ann Rheum Dis. 2017 Sep 19. pii: annrheumdis-2017211687. https://doi.org/10.1136/annrheumdis-2017-211687.
[Epub ahead of print]
2. Bharucha T, Rutherford A, Skeoch S, Alavi A, Brown M, Galloway J;
Diagnostic yield of FDG-PET/CT in fever of unknown origin: a systematic review, meta-analysis, and Delphi exercise. Clin Radiol. 2017 Sep;72(9):764-771.
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.crad.2017.04.014. Epub 2017 Jun 7.
3. Besson FL, Chaumet-Riffaud P, Playe M, Noel N, Lambotte O, Goujard C,
et al. Contribution of (18)F-FDG PET in the diagnostic assessment of fever
of unknown origin (FUO): a stratification-based meta-analysis. Eur J Nucl
Med Mol Imaging. 2016 Sep;43(10):1887-95. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00259016-3377-6. Epub 2016 Apr 2. Review.
PP14
18F-FDG PET/CT in the detection of an early infection of
arteriovenous grafts in hemodialysis patients
P. Koranda1, L. Henzlová1, M. Kamínek1, Mo. Váchalová2, P. Bachleda2
1
Department of Nuclear Medicine, University Hospital Olomouc and
Palacky University, Olomouc, Czech Republic; 2Department of Vascular
and Transplantation Surgery, University Hospital Olomouc and Palacky
University, Olomouc, Czech Republic
Correspondence: P. Koranda
EJNMMI Research 2018, 8(Suppl 1):PP14
Aim: For patients on chronic hemodialysis (HD) treatment, vascular
access is required. Insertion of arteriovenous graft (AVG) is indicated
in patients with a failed arteriovenous fistula. The aim of this study
was to evaluate 18F-FDG PET/CT in detection of early AVG infections.
Early treatment of AVG infection is important, because an advanced
prosthetic infection usually leads to removal of the prosthesis.
Methods: A total of 51 AVGs was evaluated. One-year monitoring
was completed in 30 AVGs. 18F-FDG PET/CT was performed at intervals of 10, 20–30, and 40–50 weeks after AVG insertion. Increased
accumulation of FDG and WBC in the prosthesis was classified as
focal or diffuse. An agreement between the 18F-FDG PET/CT and
Page 11 of 12
“reference” parameters (clinical local status, CRP, and microbiological
evaluation of a swab sampled from the HD cannula immediately
after the HD procedure) was evaluated using the Gwet’s coefficient
AC1 and McNemar test for symmetry.
Results: At 10 weeks since AVG implantation the AC1 values were: focal
18F-FDG accumulation - clinical status AC1 0.693, CRP AC1 0.605, cannula microbiology AC1 0.518; focal and diffuse 18F-FDG accumulation clinical status AC1 0.617, CRP AC1 0.695 (but McNemar 0.039), cannula
microbiology AC1 0.628; diffuse 18F-FDG accumulation - clinical status
AC1 0.079, CRP AC1 0.167, cannula microbiology AC1 0.255. At 20 to 30
weeks after AVG implantation: focal 18F-FDG accumulation - clinical status AC1 0.656, CRP AC1 0.570, cannula microbiology AC1 0.409; focal
and diffuse 18F-FDG accumulation - clinical status AC1 0.596, CRP AC1
0.669, cannula microbiology AC1 0.518 (McNemar 0.012),; diffuse 18FFDG accumulation - clinical status AC1 0.073 (McNemar 0.041), CRP
AC1 0.166, (McNemar 0.031), microbiology AC1 0.076. Between 40 and
50 weeks since AVG implantation: focal 18F-FDG accumulation - clinical
status AC1 0.524 (McNemar 0.039), CRP AC1 0.456, cannula microbiology AC1 0.569; focal and diffuse 18F-FDG accumulation - clinical status
AC1 0.673, CRP AC1 0.710, cannula microbiology AC1 0.720; diffuse
18F-FDG accumulation - clinical status AC1 0.347 (McNemar 0.039), CRP
AC1 0.385, cannula microbiology AC1 0.371.
Conclusion: The study results show that focal accumulation of 18FFDG (in combination with diffuse uptake or solely) can be considered
as a sign of early AVG infection in HD patients. This fact is consistent
with the results of similar 18F-FDG PET/CT studies concerning infections of common AVG grafts (1, 2). 18F-FDG PET/CT can serve as a
supportive parameter indicating the need for antibiotic therapy in
early infection of AVG in HD patients.
References
1. Berger P, Vaartjes I, Scholtens A, et al. Differential FDG-PET uptake pPatterns in uninfected and infected Central Prosthetic Vascular Grafts. Eur J
Vasc Endovasc Surg. 2015; 50(3):376-83.
2. Spacek M, Belohlavek O, Votrubova J, et al. Diagnostics of "non-acute"
vascular prosthesis infection using 18F-FDG PET/CT: our experience with
96 prostheses. Eur J Nucl Med Mol Imaging. 2009; 36(5):850-8.
PP15
89Zr-Siderophore-Affibody conjugates for imaging EGFR
expression
D. Summer1, J. Garousi2, M. Oroujeni2, B. Mitran3, K. G. Andersson4,
A. Vorobyeva2, J.n Löfblom4, A.Orlova3, V. Tolmachev2, C. Decristoforo1
1
Department of Nuclear Medicine, Medical University Innsbruck,
Anichstrasse 35, A-6020 Innsbruck, Austria; 2Institute of Immunology,
Genetic and Pathology, Uppsala University, SE-75185 Uppsala, Sweden;
3
Division of Molecular Imaging, Department of Medicinal Chemistry,
Uppsala University, SE-751 83 Uppsala, Sweden; 4Division of Protein
Technology, KTH Royal Institute of Technology, SE-10691 Stockholm,
Sweden
Correspondence: C. Decristoforo
EJNMMI Research 2018, 8(Suppl 1):PP15
Aim: Zirconium-89 has gained great interest for PET, when imaging at
late time points is required. Desferrioxamine B (DFO), is mostly used for
this radionuclide as bifunctional chelator (BFC) and we recently reported
on fusarinine C (FSC) with similar zirconium-89 complexing properties but
potentially higher stability related to its cyclic structure. This study reports
on the comparison of FSC and DFO as BFCs for 89Zr labelling of the affibody ZEGFR:2377 targeting Epidermal Growth Factor Receptors (EGFR).
Methods: FSC-ZEGFR:2377 and DFO-ZEGFR:2377 were evaluated regarding labeling, in vitro stability, specificity, cell uptake, receptor affinity, biodistribution and microPET-CT imaging.
Results: Both conjugates showed increased labelling yields at elevated
temperature (85°C). Both conjugates revealed remarkable specificity, affinity and slow cell-line dependent internalisation. Labeling at 85°C
showed comparable results in A431 tumor xenografted mice with
EJNMMI Research 2018, 8(Suppl 1):5
minor differences regarding blood clearance, tumor and liver uptake
but clear improvement as compared to 89Zr-DFO-ZEGFR:2377, labeled
at room temperature, which was confirmed by MicroPET-CT imaging.
Conclusion: We were able to show that FSC is a suitable alternative to
DFO for labeling of biomolecules with zirconium-89. Furthermore our
findings indicate that 89Zr- labeling of DFO conjugates at higher
temperature reduces off-chelate binding leading to significantly
improved tumor-to-organ ratios and therefore enhancing image contrast.
Page 12 of 12
PP16
TAFC Modifications
P. Kaeopookum1,4, D. Summer1, T. Orasch2, B. Lechner2, M. Petrik3,
Z. Novy3, C. Rangger1, H. Haas2, C. Decristoforo1
1
Department of Nuclear Medicine, Medical University Innsbruck,
Innsbruck, Austria; 2Division of Molecular Biology, Biocenter, Medical
University Innsbruck, Innsbruck, Austria; 3Faculty of Medicine and Dentistry,
Institute of Molecular and Translation Medicine, Palacky University,
Olomouc, Czech Republic; 4Research and Development Division, Thailand
Institute of Nuclear Technology, Nakhonnayok, Thailand
Correspondence: C. Decristoforo
EJNMMI Research 2018, 8(Suppl 1):PP16
exhibited excellent targeting properties in A. fumigatus infection
model. We aimed to modify TAFC to investigate the influence of introduced substitutes on preservation of TAFC characteristics in vitro
and in vivo.
Methods: Various TAFC modifications with various substitution (different
carbon chain length acyl compounds as well as charge substitutents) were
prepared and labelled with 68Ga. Stability, log P and Protein binding was
assessed. Uptake and growth studies in Aspergillus species expressing the
specific TAFC Transporter (MirB) were performed. Normal biodistribution
and μPET Imaging of selected compounds was performed.
Results: In vitro uptake studies using A. fumigatus showed the recognition of MirB to monosubstituted TAFC whereas uptake assays of MirBpossesing- and wildtype-A. terreus confirmed the specificity to TAFC of
MirB transporter. Llipophilicities as expressed in logD were -0.38 to -3.80.
One selected compound, [68Ga]DABuFC displayed low protein binding
and was stable in PBS and serum and revealed comparable biodistribution behaviors and image contrast by PET/CT compared to [68Ga]TAFC.
Conclusion: Our studies show the possibility to modify TAFC without
losing its properties and recognition of MirB. Introducing functionalities such as fluorescent dyes or anti-infection moieties opens new
ways for theranostics of infection diseases.
Aim: Aspergillus fumigatus produces the siderphore triacetylfusarinine C (TAFC) for iron acquisition and is essential for its virulence,
therefore a specific marker for invasive aspergillosis. [68Ga]TAFC
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