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Clinical Research |
Departments of 1 Nuclear Medicine and 2 Haematology and 3 Institute of Pathology, University Hospital Ulm, Ulm, Germany and 4 Department of Radiology and the Holden Comprehensive Cancer Center, University of Iowa, Iowa City, Iowa
Requests for reprints: Peter Möller, Institute of Pathology, University Hospital Ulm, Robert-Koch-Straße 8, D-89081 Ulm, Germany. Phone: 49-731-500-23320; Fax: 49-731-500-23321; E-mail: peter.moeller{at}uniklinik-ulm.de.
| Abstract |
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330 MBq FLT, emission and transmission scanning was done. Tracer uptake in lymphoma was evaluated semiquantitatively by calculation of standardized uptake values (SUV) and correlated to tumor grading and proliferation fraction as determined by Ki-67 immunohistochemistry. FLT-PET detected a total of 490 lesions compared with 420 lesions revealed by routine staging. In 11 patients with indolent lymphoma, mean FLT-SUV in biopsied lesions was 2.3 (range, 1.2-4.5). In 21 patients with aggressive lymphoma, a significantly higher FLT uptake was observed (mean FLT-SUV, 5.9; range, 3.2-9.2; P < 0.0001) and a cutoff value of SUV = 3 accurately discriminated between indolent and aggressive lymphoma. Linear regression analysis indicated significant correlation of FLT uptake in biopsied lesions and proliferation fraction (r = 0.84; P < 0.0001). In this clinical study, FLT-PET was suitable for imaging malignant lymphoma and noninvasive assessment of tumor grading. Due to specific imaging of proliferation, FLT may be a superior PET tracer for detection of malignant lymphoma in organs with high physiologic fluorodeoxyglucose uptake and early detection of progression to a more aggressive histology or potential transformation. (Cancer Res 2006; 66(22): 11055-61) | Introduction |
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However, FDG is not tumor specific and can also accumulate in inflammatory lesions, such as tuberculosis (granulomas), abscesses, and sarcoidosis (10, 11). Therefore, to increase specificity for malignant lesions, other tracers that complement the information provided by FDG are required. Measurement of tumor growth and DNA synthesis might be appropriate for assessment of proliferative activity in malignant tumors. Several DNA precursors have been investigated thus far, including [11C]thymidine, which represents the native pyrimidine base used for DNA synthesis in vivo (12, 13). Due to the short half-life of 11C and rapid degradation of [11C]thymidine, this tracer was considered less suitable for clinical use.
The thymidine analogue 3'-deoxy-3'-[18F]fluorothymidine (FLT), which is derived from the cytostatic drug azidovudine, has been reported to be stable in vitro and to accumulate in proliferating tissues and malignant tumors (14). Thymidine kinase 1 (TK1) was revealed as key enzyme responsible for the intracellular trapping of FLT (15, 16). We have shown recently a significant correlation of tumoral proliferation and FLT uptake in a mouse lymphoma xenotransplant model (17) and in human lung cancer (18). Here, we did a prospective study to evaluate whether PET with the novel tracer FLT enables accurate detection of lymphoma and allows assessment of proliferation and tumor grading.
| Patients and Methods |
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MIB-1-stained tissue sections were examined by an experienced pathologist (P.M.) blinded to the results of respective PET scans. Evaluation of MIB-1 immunostaining was carried out in an area with high cellularity as described previously (18). Approximately 800 cells were analyzed per case. All lymphatic cells with nuclear staining of any intensity were defined as positive. Proliferative activity was described as percentage of MIB-1-stained nuclei per total number of nuclei in the sample.
Synthesis of [18F]FLT, PET imaging, and quantification of lesional FLT uptake. [18F]FLT was produced using the method of Machulla et al. (20) with minor modifications. The detailed synthesis protocol was described elsewhere (21). PET imaging was done using a high-resolution full ring scanner (ECAT Exact or ECAT HR+, Siemens/CTI, Knoxville, TN), which produces 47 or 63 contiguous slices per bed position, respectively. Five bed positions were measured in each patient covering a total field of view of 77.5 cm. The emission scan included the base of the skull, neck, thorax, abdomen, pelvis, and proximal femora in all patients. In 11 patients, the entire skull was included for emission scanning. Patients fasted for at least 6 hours before undergoing PET. Static emission scans were done 60 minutes after injection of 265 to 370 MBq [18F]FLT (mean, 345 MBq). The acquisition time was 10 minutes per bed position. Four-minute transmission scans with a germanium-68/gallium-68 ring source were done for attenuation correction after tracer application. Images were reconstructed using an iterative reconstruction algorithm described by Schmidlin et al. (22).
All images were evaluated by two experienced nuclear medicine physicians (A.K.B. and S.N.R.) without knowledge of the results of histopathologic classification or standard staging procedures. Focal FLT uptake in lymph node basins or organs with usually mild and homogeneous activity were interpreted as manifestation sites of lymphoma. Due to the reduced spatial resolution of PET, no more than three lesions were calculated per single lymph node basin (e.g., the axilla). If both readers produced different results, respective scans were reanalyzed and a consensus was made. Circular regions of interest were drawn containing the area with focally increased FLT uptake to calculate respective standardized uptake values (SUV; FLT-SUV). Mean and maximum values of FLT-SUV were calculated for all lesions and mean values in a reference segment of the lungs, liver, bone marrow, spleen, bone, intestines, and brain.
To estimate the variability of FLT uptake in individual patients, mean and maximum SUVs were calculated in all lesions >20 mm, which were evident at routine clinical staging. In 24 patients, FLT uptake was quantified in a total of 186 lesions. In eight patients with only one or two lesions >20 mm and in two patients with Hodgkin's disease, variability was not assessed.
Routine staging. Routine staging included clinical examination, laboratory screening, chest X-ray, CT of the chest and abdomen, and bone marrow biopsy. Twenty-one patients additionally underwent FDG-PET imaging. FDG uptake in lymphoma lesions was assessed according to the method described for FLT-PET. Additionally, FDG uptake in normal organs was calculated to compare the biodistribution of FLT with that of FDG.
Data analysis. After completion of the study, results of histopathology, immunohistochemistry, routine staging procedures, and FLT-PET findings were compared. Lesions exceeding a number of three in a single lymph node basin were marked as multiple and were not included in the calculation. Data are presented as mean, median, range, and SD. FLT and FDG uptake in indolent and aggressive lymphoma were compared using the Wilcoxon's signed-rank test. Differences were considered significant at a level of P < 0.05. For estimation of the variability of tumoral FLT uptake in individual patients, the coefficient of variation (expressed as SD/mean SUV in all lesions) was calculated. The coefficient of variation is a unitless ratio allowing to compare the variability in different patients.
| Results |
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Imaging of lymphoma with FLT-PET and FDG-PET. FLT-PET produced images of high contrast of both lymphoma and proliferating tissues (Fig. 1 ). In all patients, focal FLT uptake could be detected in lymphoma manifestation sites described by routine staging procedures. Preknown manifestation sites were also positive at FDG-PET in 21 patients (sensitivity of FDG-PET, 100%). The specificity of FLT-PET and FDG-PET could not be calculated because all patients had active disease. The total number of lesions in 34 patients was 490 (Table 1A and B). Compared with routine staging procedures (420 lesions), a higher number of lesions were detected on FLT-PET. However, the difference was not statistically significant (P = 0.23). In 14 patients, a total of 79 additional lesions could be identified (Fig. 1; Table 1A and B). In four patients, the number of detected lesions was lower. Nine lesions were missed in four patients compared with standard staging procedures (Table 1A and B), including three osseous lesions in the vertebral column, which were not detected by FLT-PET. Compared with routine clinical staging, the sensitivity of FLT-PET was 97.8% (411 of 420). However, FLT-PET indicated the same clinical stage in all patients as the standard staging procedures (Table 1A and B).
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Using receiver operating characteristic analysis, mean FLT-SUV distinguished between aggressive and indolent lymphoma with an area under the curve (AUC) of 0.98 (maximum FLT-SUV, 0.97), whereas mean FDG-SUV distinguished between these two forms of lymphoma with an AUC of 0.78 (maximum FDG-SUV, 0.79).
Intraindividual variability of FLT uptake. In 15 individual patients with aggressive lymphoma, range of mean FLT-SUV in preknown lesions >20 mm (n = 113) was 3.1 to 11.0, and the coefficient of variation ranged from 0.14 to 0.41 (mean value, 0.23). In indolent lymphoma, range of FLT-positive lesions (n = 73) was 1.2 to 3.1 in six patients and 0.8 to 8.1 in three patients. The coefficient of variation was 0.21 to 0.43 (mean value, 0.31). Despite considerable variation of FLT-SUV in individual patients, respective SUV values were >3.0 in all patients with aggressive lymphoma. In the majority of indolent lymphoma, FLT-SUV was <3.0. An overlap occurred in three patients with indolent lymphoma presenting with SUV values up to 8.1. Whereas histopathology indicated progression in one of these (patient 7), intense FLT uptake of retroperitoneal lymph nodes could not be verified histologically in two patients (patients 2 and 25, respectively).
Proliferative activity in malignant lymphoma. MIB-1 immunohistochemistry indicated a mean proliferation fraction in lymphoma tissue samples of 61% (median, 50%; SD, 36.1%; range, 1-100%). In indolent lymphoma (6 biopsies), mean proliferation fraction was 13.5% (median, 4.5; SD, 19.2%; range, 1-50%) and in aggressive lymphoma (13 biopsies), mean proliferation fraction was 82.9% (median, 80%; SD, 12.4%; range, 48-100%). Linear regression analysis showed a significant correlation of mean FLT-SUV and Ki-67 index (r = 0.84; P < 0.0001; Fig. 6A ). The correlation of mean FDG-SUV and proliferation fraction was not statistically significant (P = 0.13; Fig. 6B).
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| Discussion |
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However, FLT is not or only marginally incorporated into DNA (<2%) and therefore not a direct measure of proliferation (17, 27). In vitro studies indicated that FLT uptake is closely related to TK1 activity and respective protein levels (15, 16). FLT is therefore considered to reflect TK1 activity and, hence, S-phase fraction rather than DNA synthesis.
FLT-PET produced images of high contrast of both lymphoma and proliferating tissues. All patients with indolent or aggressive lymphoma exhibited focal FLT uptake in lesions also described by routine staging procedures. FLT-PET showed additional lesions in 14 patients (Fig. 1) and underestimated extent of disease in 4, indicating a sensitivity of 97.8%. However, staging results according to Ann Arbor classification were the same for FLT-PET and conventional staging procedures. Because of high physiologic tracer uptake in proliferating bone marrow (mean SUV value, 6.9), the sensitivity of FLT for detecting lymphoma manifestations of bone marrow may be reduced. Accordingly, three bone lesions present at routine imaging were not detected. FLT undergoes glucoronization leading to enhanced liver uptake, which was also observed in our series (14). Decreased sensitivity rates were described for liver metastases from various solid tumors (21, 28). In this series, liver manifestations of lymphoma were not observed but may influence diagnostic accuracy of FLT-PET in a larger series. Due to negligible background uptake of FLT in the brain, specific imaging of proliferation may be appropriate for detection of lymphoma in the central nervous system (CNS). In one patient, cerebral manifestation of aggressive lymphoma was indicated by FLT-PET but not MRI (Fig. 4).
A direct comparison of the biodistribution of FLT and FDG was available in 21 patients (Fig. 2). Mean FLT uptake in lymphoma was significantly lower compared with respective FDG uptake. Recently, we observed similar findings in a series of nonsmall cell lung cancer (21). Whereas sensitivity of FLT-PET was 90% for malignant primaries, detection rates for mediastinal lymph node metastases (53%) and distant metastases (67%) were significantly lower compared with FDG-PET (77% and 100%, respectively) and FLT was interpreted less suitable for tumor staging. In contrast, FLT-PET was accurate for imaging malignant lymphoma in the present series.
An important finding of this study is a significantly higher FLT uptake in aggressive lymphoma compared with indolent lymphoma (P < 0.0001; Fig. 5). With the exception of one patient, mean FLT-SUV in biopsied lesions was <3 in patients with indolent lymphoma. Interestingly, this patient was readmitted because of progression and reclassified consecutively as aggressive lymphoma. A high FLT-SUV of 4.5 potentially indicated clinically aggressive and histologically high-grade lymphoma already at initial presentation.
In all other patients with aggressive lymphoma, FLT-SUV was >3 and a cutoff value of FLT-SUV = 3 reliably differentiated between indolent and aggressive lymphoma (Fig. 5). Imaging proliferative activity with FLT-PET seems therefore suitable for noninvasive assessment of tumor grading. These promising results warrant analysis of larger series of patients with more diverse histologic diagnoses.
Semiquantitative evaluation of FDG uptake has also been suggested for differentiation of indolent and aggressive lymphoma (4, 5). Recently, Schoder et al. reported a high likelihood of aggressive lymphoma when respective FDG uptake is >13 (6). An FDG-SUV <6 was highly indicative for indolent lymphoma. However, 45% of the patients remained in a gray zone. A cutoff value of FDG-SUV = 10 would have led to a misclassification rate of 29% in aggressive lymphoma and 19% in indolent lymphomas. In our series, a similar overlap between FDG-SUV of indolent and aggressive lymphoma was observed (Fig. 5). Caution is therefore necessary when SUV values derived from FDG-PET are used for lymphoma grading. Alternatively, calculation of net rate influx of FDG (Ki) from dynamic imaging data and serial blood sampling was suggested for lymphoma grading (4). However, this approach is time consuming and therefore less suitable in a clinical setting. Our data indicate that calculation of SUV values derived from static FLT-PET is accurate for grading of lymphoma.
In daily clinical practice, discrimination between indolent and aggressive lymphoma is based on the percentage of blasts identified in biopsied lesions either by native microscopy and/or by immunostaining of proliferating cells. However, the prognostic value of proliferation fraction as assessed by immunohistochemistry remains a matter of debate. A biopsy is required in all cases but is suggested to be representative for all lesions only in patients with aggressive lymphoma. In patients with indolent lymphoma, the heterogeneity of lymphoma proliferation can frequently not be identified, except when biopsies from several lymphoma manifestations are done. Therefore, transformation to aggressive lymphoma may be underestimated in some patients. In patients with indolent lymphoma, whole-body FLT-PET may indicate progression in areas with increased FLT uptake and guide biopsy for further verification.
Recently, FLT was suggested for therapeutic monitoring using various experimental settings. In an animal model of fibrosarcoma, it was reported that FLT uptake decreased early after antiproliferative treatment with 5-fluorouracil or cisplatin (29, 30). In a mouse lymphoma xenotransplant model, significant decrease of FLT uptake was observed already 48 hours after chemotherapy with cyclophosphamide (31). However, data are preliminary and clinical trials are needed to further validate FLT as marker for therapy response.
Several limitations have to be taken into account when transferring our results to the clinic. Our findings apply to a particular patient collective, which does not cover all subtypes of malignant lymphoma. Furthermore, SUV values were used to semiquantitatively assess the amount of tracer in tumor manifestations. Uptake in small lesions may be underestimated due to partial volume effects. In the present series, lesions for which SUV calculation has been done had a size larger than 20 mm in all but three patients. In the latter, manifestation sites of lymphoma had a maximum size of 15 mm. All three patients had aggressive disease with an FLT-SUV >4.5, indicating that partial volume effects did not impair the accuracy of FLT-PET. However, partial volume effects may influence the diagnostic accuracy of FLT-PET in a larger series. Calculation of SUV values is therefore recommended only in lesions with a minimum size of 20 mm in diameter, unless correction for partial volume averaging is done. As reported previously for the standard radiotracer FDG, false-positive findings may also occur at FLT-PET because an increased proliferation rate is not specific for malignant tumors. However, false-positive results have not yet been described in the literature.
In conclusion, specific imaging of proliferative activity was as accurate as the standard staging procedures or FDG-PET for staging malignant lymphoma. The use of FLT as PET tracer showed advantages for detection of lymphoma in the CNS and the mediastinum. FLT uptake in lymphoma differentiated between indolent and aggressive lymphoma and indicated progression in one patient. Regions with high proliferation may be identified early in the course of indolent lymphoma leading to more targeted selection of biopsy site and more aggressive therapy.
| Acknowledgments |
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The costs of publication of this article were defrayed in part by the payment of page charges. This article must therefore be hereby marked advertisement in accordance with 18 U.S.C. Section 1734 solely to indicate this fact.
We thank Drs. Brian Link and Sergei Syrbu from the University of Iowa for their critical comments and technical help.
| Footnotes |
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Received 5/30/06. Revised 7/25/06. Accepted 8/31/06.
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