Abstract
We studied the changing patterns of radiopharmaceutical use and the incidence of adverse events (AEs) to PET radiopharmaceuticals, non-PET radiopharmaceuticals, and adjunctive nonradioactive pharmaceuticals in nuclear medicine from 2007 to 2011. Methods: Fifteen academic institutions submitted quarterly reports of radiopharmaceutical use and AEs covering 2007–2011. Results: 1,024,177 radiopharmaceutical administrations were monitored: 207,281 diagnostic PET, 803,696 diagnostic non-PET, and 13,200 therapeutic. In addition, 112,830 adjunctive nonradioactive pharmaceutical administrations were monitored. The annual use of bone scintigraphy and radiotracer therapies was unchanged. PET radiopharmaceutical use increased from 17% to 26% of diagnostic procedures (P < 0.01). The incidence of radiopharmaceutical AEs was 2.1/105 administrations, with no hospitalizations or deaths. Conclusion: From 2007 to 2011, PET studies increased, and therapeutic radiopharmaceutical use and bone scintigraphy were unchanged. Over 2 decades, the incidence of AEs has remained stable at 2.1–2.3/105 dosages.
It is important to continuously monitor the use and adverse events (AEs) of radiopharmaceuticals to oversee, for our patients, our peers, and governmental regulators, the impressive safety record of our procedures (1–6), especially as new radiopharmaceuticals appear. We also inquired if there were changing patterns of use of radiopharmaceuticals for bone scintigraphy, PET, and radiolabeled antibody therapy for lymphoma.
MATERIALS AND METHODS
A group of nuclear pharmacists and physicians volunteered to join this unsponsored prospective study. These professionals are listed in the “Acknowledgments” section. The Institutional Review Board of the University of Cincinnati Medical Center ruled the study exempt from Institutional Review Board review according to title 45 of Code of Federal Regulations part 46.101 (b) (4). Nevertheless, some institutions involved in the study did require Institutional Review Board review of the protocol, and approval was always granted.
To avoid the quandary of requiring strict proof of causality, we used the Food and Drug Administration definition of an AE: “Any untoward medical occurrence associated with the use of a drug in humans, whether or not considered drug related” (7–9). An AE algorithm relating to the probability of causation was carefully reviewed by all participants, who agreed to its use to establish the triple classification of AEs as probable, possible, or unlikely for radiopharmaceuticals and nonradioactive pharmaceuticals (5). All allergic, noxious, or unintended outcomes, signs, symptoms, and laboratory abnormalities were reported for radiopharmaceuticals. For nonradioactive pharmaceuticals, only AEs not previously reported in the medical literature—or those so serious that they led to hospitalization, were life-threatening, or were lethal—were to be reported, because tabulating well-documented AEs from nonradioactive pharmaceuticals would provide no new information. Types of AEs not within the scope of this study were excluded: altered biodistribution, vasovagal responses, deterministic and stochastic effects from therapeutic radiopharmaceuticals, overdoses, poor injection technique, or false-positive results (5). This AE algorithm has also been adopted by the Radiopharmacy Committee of the European Association of Nuclear Medicine (10).
The participants sent a quarterly report to the study coordinator over a 5-y period, 2007–2011, for all radiopharmaceuticals and nonradioactive pharmaceuticals used at their institutions, including those under a new drug application, investigational new drug application, or Radioactive Drug Research Committee supervision, and any radiopharmaceutical compounded on site. Any report of an AE was followed by a conversation with the coordinator, with joint agreement being achieved on the likelihood of causality for all AEs reported. Linear regression analysis was used to determine the significance of changes in the data points over time (Data Disk, version 6.3; Data Description, Inc.).
RESULTS
Fifteen institutions participated in the planning of this study, but only 13, and finally 11, could continue to contribute data for all 5 y, as a few institutions dropped out if the career or personal path of the reporter changed. From 2007 through 2011 the group reported on 1,010,977 diagnostic studies, of which 20.5% (207,281) represented PET studies and 79.5% (803,696) were studies with single-photon–emitting radiopharmaceuticals, whether used for planar or SPECT scintigraphy. There were 13,200 therapeutic procedures, only 1.3% of the total of 1,024,177 nuclear medicine procedures monitored for AEs. The percentage of therapeutic procedures per year ranged from 1.2% (2007) to 1.5% (2010) of the total, but there was no trend suggesting significantly increasing or decreasing numbers of therapies (P > 0.05). In addition, 112,830 adjunctive procedures with nonradioactive pharmaceuticals, comprising 11% of procedures with radiopharmaceuticals, were reported.
Trends in Radiopharmaceutical Use from 2007 to 2011
There was a significant increase in PET studies as a percentage of the total over the 5 y of the study, moving from 17% to 26% of all diagnostic studies (P < 0.01). The decrease in 18F-FDG studies as a percentage of total PET scans from 85% to 80% was not statistically significant.
Labeled anti-CD20 antilymphoma antibodies have produced impressive levels of remission in refractory lymphoma and had been expected to have wide use, but this did not occur, as they represented 4.5% of therapies in 2007 and 4.0% in 2011 (P > 0.05), with a 5-y average of 3.3% of all therapies and no trend toward increasing or decreasing. The volume of single-photon bone scintigraphy, almost always with 99mTc-methylene diphosphonate, also remained constant, averaging 11.9% of all diagnostic nuclear medicine studies.
AEs from Radiopharmaceuticals and Adjunctive Pharmaceuticals
In Table 1, we have documented the annual number of AEs due to radiopharmaceuticals from 2007 to 2011. The apparent decrease per 105 administrations per year was not statistically significant. The decrease in absolute numbers of dosages reported per year (Table 1) was caused by the loss of some investigators because of career or personal changes. Table 1 also provides the incidence of AEs (probable, possible, unlikely) per year from radiopharmaceuticals during the study, and the 21 AEs (including 5 deemed unlikely but that could not be excluded) are listed by symptom complex in Table 2. No AEs requiring hospitalization, deemed life-threatening, or lethal occurred.
DISCUSSION
The data collected in this study permit an examination of trends in nuclear medicine that might lead to a different pattern of radiopharmaceutical use, which had the potential to change for several reasons. Radiolabeled anti-CD20 antibodies have yielded unequivocal therapeutic advances (11,12) but increased use did not occur, because of adequate results from the unlabeled antibody rituximab (13) and oncologist referral patterns.
PET has become an important diagnostic modality, and it was deemed possible that bone scintigraphic studies would diminish as a percentage of the total of diagnostic studies, since 18F-FDG can detect tumor in marrow before the cortex is invaded (14). However, the number of bone scintigraphy procedures was stable over the study period. The volume of PET studies did rise. Other 18F-labeled radiopharmaceuticals came into use (e.g., 18F-sodium fluoride), potentially reducing the percentage of PET studies performed with 18F-FDG PET, but the occurrence of this small change was not statistically significant. Although the estimated number of nuclear medicine procedures in the United States over the 5 y of this study declined by about 9% (15), the number of procedures per institution in our study was essentially unchanged (16,533 in 2007 vs. 16,753 in 2011). Because we could not track changes in the use of over 40 radiopharmaceuticals, we do not have data that can more fully explain the use patterns observed.
Our primary goal was to document the incidence of AEs in the practice of nuclear medicine using prospective data collection by nuclear medicine scientists, clear definitions of AEs, (16,17), and a known denominator (16,17). With this approach, we believe we have overcome the problem of underreporting of AEs because of the transient nature of these events, confusion in the terminology of AEs, anxiety about potential liability, the time to complete a report form, and the lack of relevant reporting forms (16–19), although MedWatch, the Safety Information and Adverse Event Reporting Program of the Food and Drug Administration, is available online at www.fda.gov/Safety/MedWatch/.
Because diagnostic radiopharmaceuticals are, by definition, not given for therapeutic purposes, one would expect few physiologic effects or AEs from them if the specific activity of these radiotracers is sufficiently high. Therefore, it is hardly surprising that such AEs are quite uncommon. In 1996 a survey study (covering 1989–1994) showed an AE incidence of 2.3/105 dosages (5), and in this current study we have reported a virtually identical finding, 2.1 AEs/105administrations. Deterministic effects of therapeutic radiopharmaceuticals are not infrequent because of the activity of radiation deposited at sites of their normal physiologic distribution (e.g., 131I gastritis, sialadenitis, oral mucositis), but no therapeutic radiopharmaceutical (13,200 administrations) or interventional nonradioactive drug (112,830 administrations) in this study caused hospitalization, a life-threatening AE, or death.
Outside our study, 2 deaths and 15 life-threatening AEs followed administration of the anti-CD15 antibody 99mTc-fanolesomab (NeutroSpec; Palatin Technologies), introduced in 2004 and withdrawn from the market in December 2005. No other deaths from radiopharmaceuticals have been reported since 1975 except for two from an albumin colloid and one from diethylenetriaminepentaacetic acid briefly mentioned and undated in a 1993 review (20).
In the current study, we report the first (to our knowledge) AEs from 18F-FDG, flushing of the face and trunk occurring within minutes of administration and lasting less than 2 h after injection. Other AEs not previously reported occurred with 99mTc-labeled dimercaptosuccinic acid, sestamibi, and tetrofosmin (Table 2).
There are potential weaknesses of this study. The institutions in this study may not represent the practice of nuclear medicine elsewhere, although most radiopharmaceuticals should be the same. Also, minor AEs could have been missed or ignored by the nuclear medicine technologist. We chose to include in our report all AEs, including those believed to be unlikely, since, importantly, the “unlikely” label also fits any AE on its first occurrence. Nevertheless, the results from this and our previous studies (5,6) are virtually identical and support the credibility of these results, using the definitions and methodology described above.
DISCLOSURE
The costs of publication of this article were defrayed in part by the payment of page charges. Therefore, and solely to indicate this fact, this article is hereby marked “advertisement” in accordance with 18 USC section 1734. No potential conflict of interest relevant to this article was reported.
Acknowledgments
The collaboration and wisdom of the following contributors (and their institutions) is deeply appreciated: Michelle Beauvais (William Beaumont Medical Center), Neil Petry (Duke Medical Center), Richard Reba (Georgetown Medical Center), James Ponto (Iowa University Medical Center), Steven Mattmuller (Kettering Medical Center, Dayton), Steven Karsh (Loyola Medical Center), Sandra Stoops (University of Maryland Medical Center), Joseph Hung (Mayo Clinic), Allegra Bruce (Massachusetts General Hospital), Ronald Weiner (National Institutes of Health), Richard Kowalsky (University of North Carolina Medical Center), Scott Knishka (University of Wisconsin Medical Center), Robert Massey (Walter Reed Medical Center), and Sally Schwarz (Washington University Medical Center). The statistical consultation of Chandrasiri Samaratunga is gratefully appreciated.
Footnotes
Published online May 29, 2014.
- © 2014 by the Society of Nuclear Medicine and Molecular Imaging, Inc.
REFERENCES
- Received for publication January 25, 2014.
- Accepted for publication April 22, 2014.