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Journal of Nuclear Medicine

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In BriefThis Month in JNM

This Month in JNM

Journal of Nuclear Medicine May 2018, 59 (5) 6A;
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131I controversies and lessons: Tulchinsky and colleagues present a review and critique of a recent article on the risks of secondary hematologic malignancy with radioactive iodine treatment and identify related lessons to be learned.

Page 723

PET and cancer drug development: Waaijer and colleagues focus on current applications of PET molecular imaging in the development of small molecules, antibodies, and antihormonal anticancer drugs.

Page 726

18F-fluciclovine PET and prostate cancer: Parent and Schuster provide an educational overview of 18F-fluciclovine PET in primary and metastatic prostate cancer, including imaging procedures and interpretation, as well as comparisons with conventional imaging and other agents.

Page 733

Advanced ultrasound imaging and therapy: Rix and colleagues offer a review of recent developments in diagnostic and therapeutic ultrasound, highlighting multiple innovation tracks and their translational potential.

Page 740

Salivary gland toxicity after PSMA therapy: Taïeb and colleagues offer perspective on current understanding of posttreatment toxicity in prostate-specific membrane antigen (PSMA)–targeted radionuclide therapy, with a focus on xerostomia and the need for stratification of toxicity risk.

Page 747

18F-FDG–avid thyroid incidentalomas: Pattison and colleagues investigate overall and thyroid cancer–specific survival in patients with 18F-FDG–avid thyroid incidentalomas, assessing long-term follow-up to evaluate the validity of American Thyroid Association recommendations on fine-needle aspiration cytology.

Page 749

PET/CT, MTC, and vandetanib: Werner and colleagues explore the role of metabolic imaging with 18F-FDG PET/CT shortly before and 3 mo after initiation of tyrosine kinase inhibitor treatment in patients with advanced medullary thyroid carcinoma.

Page 756

18F-fluciclovine PET/MR for prostate cancer: Elschot and colleagues determine whether quantitative imaging features derived from combined 18F-fluciclovine PET/multiparametric MR imaging show potential for detection and characterization of primary prostate cancer.

Page 762

Prediction of radioembolization outcome: Ingrisch and colleagues explore the feasibility of predicting outcomes from 90Y radioembolization in patients with intrahepatic tumors, using pretherapeutic baseline parameters and a machine-learning approach based on random survival forests.

Page 769

PET/CT in Erdheim–Chester disease: Young and colleagues assess the utility of 18F-FDG PET/CT for diagnosis, management, and treatment of Erdheim–Chester disease, including potential as an imaging biomarker for the presence of a BRAF mutation.

Page 774

DLC-induced iodide uptake in ATC: Tesselaar and colleagues research the effects of autophagy-activating digitalislike compounds on differentiation and proliferation of anaplastic thyroid cancer cell lines as a potential approach to restore iodide avidity in this rare thyroid cancer.

Page 780

Choosing tracers in prostate cancer: Rowe and colleagues provide perspective on the importance and challenges of choosing the right PET radiotracer for prostate cancer and preview an article in this issue of JNM comparing 2 widely studied agents.

Page 787

68Ga-PSMA-11 and 18F-fluciclovine PET/CT: Calais and colleagues compare PET/CT detection rates in localizing recurrent disease using 68Ga-labeled prostate-specific membrane antigen–11 and 18F-fluciclovine.

Page 789

Duration of 225Ac-PSMA tumor control: Kratochwil and colleagues report on parameters for and first indicators of efficacy in 225Ac-labeled prostate-specific membrane antigen–617 therapy in a group of patients with metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer.

Page 795

68Ga-RM2 PET/MR in prostate cancer: Minamimoto and colleagues describe imaging findings with this synthetic bombesin receptor antagonist, which targets gastrin-releasing peptide receptor, in patients with biochemical recurrence of prostate cancer and negative conventional imaging.

Page 803

177Lu-3BP-227 pancreatic cancer therapy: Baum and colleagues report on salvage radiopharmaceutical therapy with this novel neurotensin receptor 1 antagonist in patients with ductal pancreatic adenocarcinoma.

Page 809

Synthesis and evaluation of FIBG: Yamaguchi and colleagues detail a 2-step radiosynthetic method to obtain 18F-FIBG and evaluate the diagnostic and therapeutic potential of 18F-FIBG and 131I-FIBG in a pheochromocytoma model.

Page 815

Spatiotemporal accumulation of Aβ in AD: Whittington and colleagues apply mathematic modeling to β-amyloid accumulation in in vivo PET imaging data to investigate competing theories of Aβ spread in Alzheimer disease.

Page 822

18F-FDS in rat models of renal disorders: Werner and colleagues investigate the potential of 18F-FDS PET as a more precise functional renal imaging agent using rat models of kidney disease.

Page 828

Sexual dimorphism in preclinical imaging: Chan and colleagues explore the question of whether sex influences quantitative imaging metrics based on 8F-FLT uptake and tissue distribution in mouse models of cancer.

Page 833

Macrophage imaging in arthritis: Chung and colleagues evaluate the results of 18F-FEDAC PET imaging in a murine model of rheumatoid arthritis, including visualization of active inflammation sites in arthritic joints.

Page 839

MR-compatible mobile PET scanner: Nakamoto and colleagues report on image quality, lesion detection rate, quantitative values, and registration accuracy of a flexible PET scanner prototype that facilitates fused PET and MR imaging.

Page 846

ZeDD CT for pelvic PET/MR: Leynes and colleagues propose the use of patient-specific multiparametric MR imaging consisting of Dixon MR imaging and proton-density–weighted zero-echo-time MR to directly synthesize pseudo-CT images.

Page 852

  • © 2018 by the Society of Nuclear Medicine and Molecular Imaging.
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Journal of Nuclear Medicine: 59 (5)
Journal of Nuclear Medicine
Vol. 59, Issue 5
May 1, 2018
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