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The Impact of (68)Gallium DOTA PET/CT in Managing Patients With Sporadic and Familial Pancreatic Neuroendocrine Tumours

OBJECTIVE: Pancreatic neuroendocrine tumours (panNETs) arise sporadically or as part of a genetic predisposition syndrome. CT/MRI, endoscopic ultrasonography and functional imaging using Octreoscan localise and stage disease. This study aimed to evaluate the complementary role of (68)Gallium ((68)Ga...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Cuthbertson, Daniel J., Barriuso, Jorge, Lamarca, Angela, Manoharan, Prakash, Westwood, Thomas, Jaffa, Matthew, Fenwick, Stephen W., Nuttall, Christina, Lalloo, Fiona, Prachalias, Andreas, Pizanias, Michail, Wieshmann, Hulya, McNamara, Mairead G., Hubner, Richard, Srirajaskanthan, Raj, Vivian, Gillian, Ramage, John, Weickert, Martin O., Pritchard, D Mark, Vinjamuri, Sobhan, Valle, Juan, Yip, Vincent S.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Frontiers Media S.A. 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8215358/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34163434
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fendo.2021.654975
Descripción
Sumario:OBJECTIVE: Pancreatic neuroendocrine tumours (panNETs) arise sporadically or as part of a genetic predisposition syndrome. CT/MRI, endoscopic ultrasonography and functional imaging using Octreoscan localise and stage disease. This study aimed to evaluate the complementary role of (68)Gallium ((68)Ga)-DOTA PET/CT in managing patients with panNETs. DESIGN: A retrospective study conducted across three tertiary UK NET referral centres. METHODS: Demographic, clinical, biochemical, cross-sectional and functional imaging data were collected from patients who had undergone a (68)Ga-DOTA PET/CT scan for a suspected panNET. RESULTS: We collected data for 183 patients (97 male): median (SD) age 63 (14.9) years, 89.1 vs. 9.3% (n=163 vs. 17) alive vs. dead (3 data missing), 141 sporadic vs. 42 familial (MEN1, n=36; 85.7%) panNETs. Non-functional vs. functional tumours comprised 73.2 vs. 21.3% (n=134 vs. 39) (10 missing). Histological confirmation was available in 89% of individuals (n=163) but tumour grading (Ki67 classiifcation) was technically possible only in a smaller cohort (n=143): grade 1, 50.3% (n=72); grade 2, 46.2% (n=66) and grade 3, 3.5% (n=5) (40 histopathological classification either not technically feasible or biopsy not perfomed). 60.1% (n=110) were localised, 14.2% (n=26) locally advanced and 23.5% (n=43) metastatic (4 missing). 224 (68)Ga-DOTA PET/CT scans were performed in total for: diagnosis/staging 40% (n=88), post-operative assessment/clinical surveillance 53% (n=117) and consideration of peptide receptor radionuclide therapy (PRRT) 8% (n=17) (2 missing). PET/CT results confirmed other imaging findings (53%), identified new disease sites (28.5%) and excluded suspected disease (5%). Overall, (68)Ga-DOTA PET/CT imaging findings provided additional information in 119 (54%) patients and influenced management in 85 (39%) cases. CONCLUSION: (68)Ga-DOTA PET/CT imaging more accurately stages and guides treatment in patients with sporadic/familial panNETs with newly diagnosed/recurrent disease.