Abstract

Abstract OBJECTIVE MRI is gold standard for the diagnosis, surgery and radiation therapy of patients with high-grade glioma. Amino acid PET is useful in gliomas without contrast enhancement in MRI but it is unknown whether PET better identifies high-grade foci than T1-sequence with contrast enhancement or improve definition of high grade glioma infiltration related to T2/Flair images. METHODS More than 400 biopsy specimens from twenty-three patients with suspected high-grade glioma were examined in this prospective study. Patients meeting the inclusion criteria were referred for hybrid 18F-FET-PET-MRI before stereotactic biopsy. Biopsies were planned based on early FET-PET acquisition 5-15 minutes post injection and MRI. The following biopsy sites were determined in each case: (i) site of contrast enhancement and increased FET uptake; (ii) contrast enhancement but no increase in FET uptake; (iii) increased FET uptake but without contrast enhancement; and (iv) peripheral areas hyperintense in T2 FLAIR without increased FET uptake and contrast enhancement. RESULTS In 35% cases, the biopsy result was changed to a higher tumor grade after the inclusion of FET-positive sites. In all cases, high FET uptake was visualized and confirmed outside areas of contrast enhancement on MRI, indicative of high-grade glioma. Results from biopsies based on the FLAIR sequences corresponded to neoplastic lesions in 13 cases (57%), most often with a lower grade than in areas of high FET uptake. CONCLUSIONS FET-PET can be used to locate the most malignant areas of contrast-enhancing gliomas and impact the biopsy results. Surgery or radiotherapy planned solely on MRI images may miss parts of tumor presenting highest malignancy. Brain areas hyperintense in T2 FLAIR without increased amino acid uptake are not specific for malignancy in high grade gliomas.

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