AI Article Synopsis

  • The study tested a new imaging method using a specific radiolabeled GLP-1R agonist to help locate insulinomas, which are tumors causing hypoglycemia.
  • All six patients in the trial had their insulinomas successfully identified with this new technique, specifically detecting four cases that conventional methods missed.
  • This GLP-1R imaging shows promise as a noninvasive tool to better diagnose and assist in the surgical removal of insulinomas.

Article Abstract

Context: The surgical removal of insulinomas is hampered by difficulties to localize it using conventional radiological procedures. Recently these tumors were shown to exhibit a very high density of glucagon-like peptide-1 receptors (GLP-1R) in vitro that may be used as specific targets for in vivo receptor radiolabeling.

Objective: The objective of the study was to test the 111In-labeled GLP-1R agonist 111In-DOTA-exendin-4 in localizing insulinomas using single photon emission computed tomography in combination with computed tomography images.

Design: This was a prospective open-label investigation.

Setting: The study was conducted at three tertiary referral centers in Switzerland.

Patients: Patients included six consecutive patients with proven clinical and biochemical endogenous hyperinsulinemic hypoglycemia.

Intervention: (111)In-DOTA-exendin-4 was administered iv at a dose of about 90 MBq (30 microg peptide) over 5 min. Whole-body planar images of the abdomen were performed at 20 min, 4 h, 23 h, 96 h, and up to 168 h after injection. After surgical removal of the insulinomas, GLP-1R expression was assessed in the tumor tissue in vitro by GLP-1R autoradiography.

Main Outcome Measure: The detection rate of insulinomas was measured.

Results: In all six cases, the GLP-1R scans successfully detected the insulinomas identified using conventional methods in four cases. By using a gamma-probe intraoperatively, GLP-1R detection permitted a successful surgical removal of the tumors in all patients, diagnosed histopathologically as five pancreatic and one extrapancreatic insulinomas. In vitro GLP-1R autoradiography showed a high density of GLP-1R in all tested insulinomas.

Conclusion: In vivo GLP-1R imaging is an innovative, noninvasive diagnostic approach that successfully localizes small insulinomas pre- and intraoperatively and that may in the future affect the strategy of insulinoma localization.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1210/jc.2009-1082DOI Listing

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