Abstract

Background[18F]-Fluorodeoxyglucose (FDG) positron emission tomography–computed tomography (PET/CT) may sometimes be suboptimal for imaging gastric adenocarcinoma. The recently introduced [68Ga]Ga-FAPI-04 (FAPI) PET/CT targets tumor stroma and has shown considerable potential in evaluating the extent of disease in a variety of tumors.MethodsWe performed a head-to-head prospective comparison of FAPI and FDG PET/CT in the same group of 13 patients with gastric adenocarcinoma who presented for either initial staging (n = 10) or restaging (n = 3) of disease. Lesion detection and maximum standardized uptake value (SUVmax) were compared between the two types of radiotracers.ResultsAll ten primary gastric tumors were FAPI-positive (100% detection rate), whereas only five were also FDG-positive (50%). SUVmax was not significantly different, but the tumor-to-background ratio was higher for FAPI (mean, median, and range of 4.5, 3.2, and 0.8–9.7 for FDG and 12.9, 11.9, and 2.2–23.9 for FAPI, P = 0.007). The level of detection of regional lymph node involvement was comparable. FAPI showed a superior detection rate for peritoneal carcinomatosis (100% vs. none). Two patients with widespread peritoneal carcinomatosis underwent a follow-up FAPI scan after chemotherapy: one showed partial remission and the other showed progressive disease.ConclusionsThe findings of this pilot study suggest that FAPI PET/CT outperforms FDG PET/CT in detecting both primary gastric adenocarcinoma and peritoneal carcinomatosis from gastric cancer. FAPI PET/CT also shows promise for monitoring response to treatment in patients with peritoneal carcinomatosis from gastric cancer; however, larger trials are needed to validate these preliminary findings.

Highlights

  • Material and methodsGastric cancer is the fifth most diagnosed cancer and the fourth leading cause of cancer death worldwide [1]

  • FDG positron emission tomography–computed tomography (PET/Computed tomography (CT)) has been shown to be limited in evaluating the extent of disease in the peritoneal carcinomatosis pattern of metastatic disease that is frequently encountered in gastric cancer [4]

  • The recently introduced fibroblast activation protein (FAP)-targeting PET radiotracers are emerging as potential alternatives to the well-established FDG PET/CT for evaluating a variety of malignancies, especially those in which FDG is known to be of limited value [4, 7,8,9,10,11, 14]

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Summary

Introduction

Material and methodsGastric cancer is the fifth most diagnosed cancer and the fourth leading cause of cancer death worldwide [1]. The aim of the present small prospective study was to compare the findings of FDG with those of FAPI PET/CTs in the same patients with gastric adenocarcinoma. Between July and December 2020, patients with gastric cancer referred for either staging or restaging of disease were prospectively and consecutively recruited and underwent both FDG PET/CT and FAPI PET/CT scans.

Results
Conclusion

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