George Segall, M.D.

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George Segall, M.D. VA Palo Alto Health Care Sys Stanford University Problems and Pitfalls in the Interpretation of PET/CT

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Problems and Pitfalls in the Interpretation of PET/CT. George Segall, M.D. Stanford University. False Negative FDG PET. Low-grade glioma Low-grade lymphoma Bronchoalveolar lung cancer Hepatoma Renal cell carcinoma Prostate cancer. Histology. Size. < 10 mm. Post prandial scans. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of George Segall, M.D.

Page 1: George Segall, M.D.

George Segall, M.D.

VA Palo AltoHealth Care System

Stanford University

Problems and Pitfalls in the Interpretation of PET/CT

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False Negative FDG PET

Histology

Size

Post prandial scans

Hyperglycemia

Low-grade gliomaLow-grade lymphomaBronchoalveolar lung cancerHepatomaRenal cell carcinomaProstate cancer

< 10 mm

> 150 mg/dL

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57 year old man with stage IV left tonsillar scca treated with chemoradiation 21 months ago. Patient was lost to follow-up until he was referred for PET/CT. Coronal images show low FDG uptake in the brain, and high uptake in the heart and skeletal muscles.

Post Prandial Scan

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• Fasting:

Euglycemia 6 hours

Diabetes12 hours

fed 04/25 fasting 05/08

Post Prandial Scan

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51 year old man with colon polyps and a stricture referred for PET/CT to evaluate for possible malignancy. Fasting blood glucose level = 289 mg/dL. Coronal images show a good quality scan with normal FDG biodistribution.

Fasting Scan in a Diabetic

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69 year old man with 2.3 cm RUL NSC lung cancer. FBS = 309 mg/dL. No insulin was given. Coronal images show a good quality scan with high FDG tumor uptake (max SUV 5.4)

Hyperglycemia

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63 year old man with 5 cm RUL adenocarcinoma. FBS = 299 mg/dL; 90 minutes after 15u of reg insulin IV FBS = 179 mg/dL at which time FDG was injected. Coronal images show a “muscle scan” with faint tumor uptake (max SUV = 2.0)

Insulin Effect on FDG uptake

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False Positive FDG PET

Physiologic

Benign Neoplasm

Inflammatory

Miscellaneous

Adenoma

Granuloma, sarcoid, rheumatoid

Prosthesis, grafts

Fractures

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Physiologic Uptake

FDG subcutaneous infiltration

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Physiologic Uptake

Tonsillar Hyperplasia

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Talking

Nakamoto. Radiology 2005;234;879-885

Physiologic Uptake

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Physiologic Uptake: Brown Fat

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Brown Fat

• What is brown fat?

• Methods to reduce FDG uptake

Heat

Reassurance

Sedatives Beta blockers

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74 yr old man with seizures and recent cognitive disorder

Adenoma

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70 yr old man 2 months post chemoXRT for R piriform sinus cancer stage 3, T3N2M0.

Adenoma

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63 y/o man 4 months post chemoXRT for R tonsil cancer T2N1M0

Adenoma

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51 yr old man with colon cancer treated with rectosigmoid colectomy and adjuvant chemotherapy.

SUV adrenal 4.0SUV liver 2.2

Adenoma

Adrenal adenoma

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Adenoma

82 year old man with wt loss and liver mass

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Question 1

Which of the following neoplasms have been associated with focal FDG uptake in the colon?

a. Hyperplastic polyp

b. Adenomatous polyp

c. Adenocarcinoma

d. All of the above

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Question 1

Gollub et al. Combined CT Colonography and 18F-FDG PET of Colon Polyps: Potential Technique for Selective Detection of Cancer and Precancerous Lesions. AJR Am J Roentgenol. 2007 Jan;188(1):130-8.

d. All of the above

The correct answer is

Friedland et al. 18-Fluorodeoxyglucose positron emission tomography has limited sensitivity for colonic adenoma and early stage colon cancer. Gastrointest Endosc. 2005 Mar;61(3):395-400.

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Nodular Hyperplasia

74 y/o man with metastatic disease to neck from unknown primary, now NED after chemoXRT

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Infection

68 year old man with solitary lung nodule. Biopsy: aspergillosis

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Granulomatous Disease

62 year old man with hilar and mediastinal adenopathy. Biopsy: sarcoidosis

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Miscellaneous Causes

Thyroiditis

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Miscellaneous Causes

Rib Fracture

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Problems with CT

Attenuation and scatter

Beam hardening

Volume averaging

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Beam Hardening

Gollub et al. J Nucl Med 2007;48:1583-1591

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Beam Hardening

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Volume Averaging

Gollub et al. J Nucl Med 2007;48:1583-1591

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Problems with PET/CT

Patient movement

Respiratory misregistration

Attenuation correction

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• Head movement

Secure head, or use head holder

Patient Movement

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• Respiratory variation

from Ben Yeh MD, UCSF

Partial expiration best:

“Breathe in, exhale, don’t breathe”

Respiratory Misregistration

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Respiratory Misregistration

Sureshbabu and Mawlawi. J Nucl Med Technol 2005;33:156-161

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Question 2

Respiratory misregistration in PET/CT is minimized when

a. CT is performed in end inspiration

b. CT is performed in mid expiration

c. CT is performed in end expiration

d. CT is performed during quiet breathing

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Question 2

The correct answer is

b. CT is performed in mid expiration

Sureshbabu W, Mawlawi O. PET/CT Imaging Artifacts. J Nucl Med Technol 2005;33:156-161

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Attenuation Correction

Sureshbabu and Mawlawi. J Nucl Med Technol 2005;33:156-161

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Attenuation Correction

Sureshbabu and Mawlawi. J Nucl Med Technol 2005;33:156-161

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Summary

• False negative FDG PET can be reduced by careful patient selection for appropriateness and proper preparation

• False positive FDG PET can be reduced by correlation with CT and knowledge of potential pitfalls

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Summary

• CT artifacts can be avoided by optimizing technique

• PET/CT artifacts can be reduced by proper patient preparation and instructions

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