AI Article Synopsis

  • Medullary thyroid cancer (MTC) often leads to persistent disease post-surgery, necessitating ongoing imaging for detection, with gallium-68 (68Ga) PET/CT being explored for its efficacy in this context.
  • A study involving 30 patients with either biochemical or metastatic MTC evaluated the performance of 68Ga PET/CT alongside other conventional imaging methods, revealing its sensitivity varied across different disease sites.
  • The findings indicated that 68Ga PET/CT is not as effective overall compared to conventional imaging for MTC, yet it excelled in identifying bone metastases, suggesting it could replace bone scans in some cases.

Article Abstract

Context: Persistent disease after surgery is common in medullary thyroid cancer (MTC), requiring lifelong radiological surveillance. Staging workup includes imaging of neck, chest, abdomen, and bones. A study integrating all sites would be ideal. Despite the established use of gallium-68 (68Ga) positron emission tomography (PET)/CT with somatostatin analogues in most neuroendocrine tumors, its efficacy is controversial in MTC.

Objective: Evaluate the efficacy of 68Ga PET/CT in detecting MTC lesions and evaluate tumor expression of somatostatin receptors (SSTRs) associated with 68Ga PET/CT findings.

Methods: Prospective study evaluating 30 patients with MTC [group 1 (n = 16), biochemical disease; group 2 (n = 14), metastatic disease]. Patients underwent 68Ga PET/CT, bone scan, CT and ultrasound of the neck, CT of the chest, CT/MRI of the abdomen, and MRI of the spine. 68Ga PET/CT findings were analyzed by disease site as positive or negative and as concordant or discordant with conventional studies. Sensitivity and specificity were calculated using pathological or cytological analysis or unequivocal identification by standard imaging studies. Immunohistochemical analysis of SSTRs was compared with 68Ga PET/CT findings.

Results: In both groups, 68Ga PET/CT was inferior to currently used imaging studies except for bone scan. In group 2, 68Ga PET/CT sensitivities were 56%, 57%, and 9% for detecting neck lymph nodes, lung metastases, and liver metastases, respectively, and 100% for bone metastases, superior to the bone scan (44%). Expression of SSTRs, observed in 44% of tumors, was not associated with 68Ga-DOTATATE uptake.

Conclusions: 68Ga PET/CT does not provide optimal whole-body imaging as a single procedure in patients with MTC. However, it is highly sensitive in detecting bone lesions and could be a substitute for a bone scan and MRI.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1210/jc.2018-00193DOI Listing

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