Abstract

BackgroundThere is an increasing interest in developing predictive biomarkers of tissue hypoxia using functional imaging for personalised radiotherapy in patients with rectal cancer that are considered for neoadjuvant chemoradiotherapy (CRT). The study explores [18F]fluoromisonidazole ([18F]FMISO) positron emission tomography (PET) scans for predicting clinical response in rectal cancer patients receiving neoadjuvant CRT.MethodsPatients with biopsy-proven rectal adenocarcinoma were imaged at 0–45 min, 2 and 4 h, at baseline and after 8–10 fractions of CRT (week 2). The first 6 patients did not receive an enema (the non-enema group) and the last 4 patients received an enema before PET-CT scan (the enema group). [18F]FMISO production failed on 2 occasions. Static PET images at 4 h were analysed using tumour-to-muscle (T:M) SUVmax and tumour-to-blood (T:B) SUVmax. The 0–45 min dynamic PET scans were analysed using Casciari model to report hypoxia and perfusion. Akaike information criteria (AIC) were used to compare data fittings for different pharmacokinetic models. Pathological tumour regression grade was scored using American Joint Committee on Cancer (AJCC) 7.0. Shapiro-Wilk test was used to evaluate the normality of the data.ResultsFive out of eleven (5/11) patients were classed as good responders (AJCC 0/1 or good clinical response) and 6/11 as poor responders (AJCC 2/3 or poor clinical response). The median T:M SUVmax was 2.14 (IQR 0.58) at baseline and 1.30 (IQR 0.19) at week 2, and the corresponding median tumour hypoxia volume was 1.08 (IQR 1.31) cm3 and 0 (IQR 0.15) cm3, respectively. The median T:B SUVmax was 2.46 (IQR 1.50) at baseline and 1.61 (IQR 0.14) at week 2, and the corresponding median tumour hypoxia volume was 5.68 (IQR 5.86) cm3 and 0.76 (IQR 0.78) cm3, respectively. For 0–45 min tumour modelling, the median hypoxia was 0.92 (IQR 0.41) min−1 at baseline and 0.70 (IQR 0.10) min−1 at week 2. The median perfusion was 4.10 (IQR 1.71) ml g−1 min−1 at baseline and 2.48 (IQR 3.62) ml g−1 min−1 at week 2. In 9/11 patients with both PET scans, tumour perfusion decreased in non-responders and increased in responders except in one patient. None of the changes in other PET parameters showed any clear trend with clinical outcome.ConclusionsThis pilot study with small number of datasets revealed significant challenges in delivery and interpretation of [18F]FMISO PET scans of rectal cancer. There are two principal problems namely spill-in from non-tumour tracer activity from rectal and bladder contents. Emphasis should be made on reducing spill-in effects from the bladder to improve data quality. This preliminary study has shown fundamental difficulties in the interpretation of [18F]FMISO PET scans for rectal cancer, limiting its clinical applicability.

Highlights

  • There is an increasing interest in developing predictive biomarkers of tissue hypoxia using functional imaging for personalised radiotherapy in patients with rectal cancer that are considered for neoadjuvant chemoradiotherapy (CRT)

  • Limited use of most positron emission tomography (PET) tracers was suggested for the assessment of hypoxia in the tumours of the renal, liver, colorectal, bladder and prostate, with the exception of [18F]FAZA and [xCu]Cu-ATSM for colorectal tumours for visualisation purposes, though semi-quantitative methods were attempted [44, 80]. [18F]FMISO in colorectal was not recommended and our finding suggest the same [78]. [18F]FDG PET has been useful in the management of rectal cancer as a marker of glucose metabolism but not hypoxia directly and is not discussed here

  • Since the tumour regression grade (TRG) scores were obtained in 8 patients and clinical response in 3 patients who did not undergo surgery, the conclusions drawn from this study are limited by the small number of subjects

Read more

Summary

Introduction

There is an increasing interest in developing predictive biomarkers of tissue hypoxia using functional imaging for personalised radiotherapy in patients with rectal cancer that are considered for neoadjuvant chemoradiotherapy (CRT). Hypoxia in cancer cells can lead to radioresistance and influence radiotherapy (RT) response [1,2,3]. Tumour hypoxia is a consequence of imbalance between oxygen consumption and supply [5] due to factors mostly related to perfusion, diffusion or anaemia. Perfusion-related acute ( known as cyclic [6]) hypoxia is caused by limited oxygen delivery to the tissue due to fluctuations in blood flow as a consequence of poor tumour microvasculature. Diffusion-related chronic hypoxia is caused by an increase in diffusion distances of oxygen from isolated blood vessels leading to inadequate oxygen supply which lasts from a few hours to many days. An arterial blood partial pressure (pO2) less than 80 mmHg is considered hypoxemic hypoxia [7]

Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call