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Meeting ReportOncology: Basic, Translational & Therapy

Ultra-low-dose 18F-FDG PET/CT protocols, quality measurements and experience in clinical patient management

Dolores Cabello Garcia, Ana Julia Allende, Stewart Young, Antonis Kalemis, Eva Maria Martinez Gimeno, Jose Muñoz Iglesias, Iraida Marrero, Jon Uña Gorospe, Marta De Sequera Rahola and Carlos Cardenas-Negro
Journal of Nuclear Medicine May 2012, 53 (supplement 1) 1233;
Dolores Cabello Garcia
1Nuclear Medicine, University Nuestra Señora de Candelaria Hospital, Santa Cruz de Tenerife, Spain
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Ana Julia Allende
1Nuclear Medicine, University Nuestra Señora de Candelaria Hospital, Santa Cruz de Tenerife, Spain
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Stewart Young
2Philips Healthcare, Hamburg, Germany
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Antonis Kalemis
3Philips Healthcare, Reigate, United Kingdom
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Eva Maria Martinez Gimeno
1Nuclear Medicine, University Nuestra Señora de Candelaria Hospital, Santa Cruz de Tenerife, Spain
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Jose Muñoz Iglesias
1Nuclear Medicine, University Nuestra Señora de Candelaria Hospital, Santa Cruz de Tenerife, Spain
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Iraida Marrero
1Nuclear Medicine, University Nuestra Señora de Candelaria Hospital, Santa Cruz de Tenerife, Spain
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Jon Uña Gorospe
1Nuclear Medicine, University Nuestra Señora de Candelaria Hospital, Santa Cruz de Tenerife, Spain
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Marta De Sequera Rahola
1Nuclear Medicine, University Nuestra Señora de Candelaria Hospital, Santa Cruz de Tenerife, Spain
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Carlos Cardenas-Negro
1Nuclear Medicine, University Nuestra Señora de Candelaria Hospital, Santa Cruz de Tenerife, Spain
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Abstract

1233

Objectives Increasing use of 18F-FDG for diagnosis, staging and therapy monitoring of cancer has led to concern on total injected radiation dose. We investigated the impact of reduced dose on quantitative accuracy, and in a clinical study, using time of flight PET/CT system.

Methods Phantom measurements (i) and clinical patient evaluation (ii) were performed. In the first, a NEMA body phantom was scanned four times, with total activity (TA) of 20 and 40 MBq, and target-to-background ratio (TBR) of 4:1 and 2:1. Five lower activity images were simulated by truncating list-mode files (1-3min acq. times), using default recon parameters. ROIs were defined on CT, and observed activity statistics recorded. In the second study, all patients (n=80) imaged using the low-dose protocol (<=2.7 MBq/kg, 2.4±0.3) between Sept 2008 and May 2011 were enrolled retrospectively.

Results All targets were visible on all phantom images, except the 10mm sphere at 2:1 TBR. Excluding this one, no significant differences of observed contrast were seen between 20 and 40 MBq TA for either TBR. In the patient study, 31 scans were PET-positive, and 49 PET-negative. Histopathological confirmation (20 pts) and clinical follow-up data (all pts,17.3±7 months) were obtained, and 25 had one or more malignant lesions (positive), 55 were negative. PET provided 22 true positive, 46 true negative, 9 false positive (due to inflammation or benign disease e.g. adrenal adenoma) and 3 false negative cases (2 low activity tumours, 1 intestinal activity), consistent with confounding effects as reported at higher doses.

Conclusions Considering the TOF capabilities of new PET/CT scanners, a clinical protocol was implemented with mean injected activity of 2.7 MBq/kg, 1.5 mins/bed-position. The accuracy of lesion detection was similar to what is reported in literature using conventional PET with higher doses

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Journal of Nuclear Medicine
Vol. 53, Issue supplement 1
May 2012
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Ultra-low-dose 18F-FDG PET/CT protocols, quality measurements and experience in clinical patient management
Dolores Cabello Garcia, Ana Julia Allende, Stewart Young, Antonis Kalemis, Eva Maria Martinez Gimeno, Jose Muñoz Iglesias, Iraida Marrero, Jon Uña Gorospe, Marta De Sequera Rahola, Carlos Cardenas-Negro
Journal of Nuclear Medicine May 2012, 53 (supplement 1) 1233;

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Ultra-low-dose 18F-FDG PET/CT protocols, quality measurements and experience in clinical patient management
Dolores Cabello Garcia, Ana Julia Allende, Stewart Young, Antonis Kalemis, Eva Maria Martinez Gimeno, Jose Muñoz Iglesias, Iraida Marrero, Jon Uña Gorospe, Marta De Sequera Rahola, Carlos Cardenas-Negro
Journal of Nuclear Medicine May 2012, 53 (supplement 1) 1233;
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