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Feasibility and accuracy of single time point imaging for renal dosimetry following (177)Lu-DOTATATE (‘Lutate’) therapy

BACKGROUND: This study aims to assess both feasibility and accuracy of renal dosimetry imaging protocols in patients receiving Lutate therapy for neuroendocrine tumours (NETs), when data acquisition over multiple days is not possible on all cycles. METHOD: Patients who had received a full 4 cycles o...

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Autores principales: Willowson, Kathy P., Eslick, Enid, Ryu, Hyunju, Poon, Aurora, Bernard, Elizabeth J., Bailey, Dale L.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Springer International Publishing 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6300448/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30569328
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s40658-018-0232-9
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author Willowson, Kathy P.
Eslick, Enid
Ryu, Hyunju
Poon, Aurora
Bernard, Elizabeth J.
Bailey, Dale L.
author_facet Willowson, Kathy P.
Eslick, Enid
Ryu, Hyunju
Poon, Aurora
Bernard, Elizabeth J.
Bailey, Dale L.
author_sort Willowson, Kathy P.
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: This study aims to assess both feasibility and accuracy of renal dosimetry imaging protocols in patients receiving Lutate therapy for neuroendocrine tumours (NETs), when data acquisition over multiple days is not possible on all cycles. METHOD: Patients who had received a full 4 cycles of Lutate therapy with complete imaging at each cycle were included. Imaging consisted of quantitative SPECT/CT of the kidneys at 4, 24 and 96–120 h post injection. Renal absorbed dose was calculated for each data set, and in addition, five alternative methods were explored for comparison. Method 1: a patient average clearance time (t(1/2) average) derived from the first half of contributing patient data was used to estimate absorbed dose for subsequent patients based on 4 h imaging alone; method 2: t(1/2) average was applied to subsequent patients on 24 h imaging alone; method 3: a patient-specific clearance rate (t(1/2) patient) was determined from complete image data of cycle 1 and applied subsequently to remaining cycles using 4 h image data alone; method 4: t(1/2) patient was applied to 24 h imaging alone in subsequent cycles; method 5: the 120 h data was estimated on subsequent cycles based on the cycle 1 fraction of injected activity (%IA) at 24 and 120 h. RESULTS: Twenty treatments from 18 patients, resulting in 80 cycles of therapy, were analysed. The measured average renal absorbed dose per cycle of treatment was 0.38 ± 0.19 Gy/GBq when derived from full imaging data. The use of t(1/2) average applied to a single time point led to large deviations of dose estimates from true values (on average 59% and 30%, when using 4 h data and 24 h data, respectively). The use of complete image data on cycle 1 and the derivation of t(1/2) patient led to improved dose estimates, with an average deviation from true values of 13% and 2% when using 4 h data only and 24 h data only, respectively. The use of a 120 h %IA derived from cycle 1 led to an average deviation from true dose estimates of 14%. CONCLUSION: In instances where demands on both patients and facilities make multiple time point data acquisition impractical, renal dosimetry is best derived through complete imaging at cycle 1 only followed by a single 24 h imaging time point on subsequent cycles, assuming no significant changes in renal function during the time course of therapy.
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spelling pubmed-63004482019-01-04 Feasibility and accuracy of single time point imaging for renal dosimetry following (177)Lu-DOTATATE (‘Lutate’) therapy Willowson, Kathy P. Eslick, Enid Ryu, Hyunju Poon, Aurora Bernard, Elizabeth J. Bailey, Dale L. EJNMMI Phys Original Research BACKGROUND: This study aims to assess both feasibility and accuracy of renal dosimetry imaging protocols in patients receiving Lutate therapy for neuroendocrine tumours (NETs), when data acquisition over multiple days is not possible on all cycles. METHOD: Patients who had received a full 4 cycles of Lutate therapy with complete imaging at each cycle were included. Imaging consisted of quantitative SPECT/CT of the kidneys at 4, 24 and 96–120 h post injection. Renal absorbed dose was calculated for each data set, and in addition, five alternative methods were explored for comparison. Method 1: a patient average clearance time (t(1/2) average) derived from the first half of contributing patient data was used to estimate absorbed dose for subsequent patients based on 4 h imaging alone; method 2: t(1/2) average was applied to subsequent patients on 24 h imaging alone; method 3: a patient-specific clearance rate (t(1/2) patient) was determined from complete image data of cycle 1 and applied subsequently to remaining cycles using 4 h image data alone; method 4: t(1/2) patient was applied to 24 h imaging alone in subsequent cycles; method 5: the 120 h data was estimated on subsequent cycles based on the cycle 1 fraction of injected activity (%IA) at 24 and 120 h. RESULTS: Twenty treatments from 18 patients, resulting in 80 cycles of therapy, were analysed. The measured average renal absorbed dose per cycle of treatment was 0.38 ± 0.19 Gy/GBq when derived from full imaging data. The use of t(1/2) average applied to a single time point led to large deviations of dose estimates from true values (on average 59% and 30%, when using 4 h data and 24 h data, respectively). The use of complete image data on cycle 1 and the derivation of t(1/2) patient led to improved dose estimates, with an average deviation from true values of 13% and 2% when using 4 h data only and 24 h data only, respectively. The use of a 120 h %IA derived from cycle 1 led to an average deviation from true dose estimates of 14%. CONCLUSION: In instances where demands on both patients and facilities make multiple time point data acquisition impractical, renal dosimetry is best derived through complete imaging at cycle 1 only followed by a single 24 h imaging time point on subsequent cycles, assuming no significant changes in renal function during the time course of therapy. Springer International Publishing 2018-12-20 /pmc/articles/PMC6300448/ /pubmed/30569328 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s40658-018-0232-9 Text en © The Author(s). 2018 Open AccessThis 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.
spellingShingle Original Research
Willowson, Kathy P.
Eslick, Enid
Ryu, Hyunju
Poon, Aurora
Bernard, Elizabeth J.
Bailey, Dale L.
Feasibility and accuracy of single time point imaging for renal dosimetry following (177)Lu-DOTATATE (‘Lutate’) therapy
title Feasibility and accuracy of single time point imaging for renal dosimetry following (177)Lu-DOTATATE (‘Lutate’) therapy
title_full Feasibility and accuracy of single time point imaging for renal dosimetry following (177)Lu-DOTATATE (‘Lutate’) therapy
title_fullStr Feasibility and accuracy of single time point imaging for renal dosimetry following (177)Lu-DOTATATE (‘Lutate’) therapy
title_full_unstemmed Feasibility and accuracy of single time point imaging for renal dosimetry following (177)Lu-DOTATATE (‘Lutate’) therapy
title_short Feasibility and accuracy of single time point imaging for renal dosimetry following (177)Lu-DOTATATE (‘Lutate’) therapy
title_sort feasibility and accuracy of single time point imaging for renal dosimetry following (177)lu-dotatate (‘lutate’) therapy
topic Original Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6300448/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30569328
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s40658-018-0232-9
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