Mankoff David A, Eary Janet F, Link Jeanne M, Muzi Mark, Rajendran Joseph G, Spence Alexander M, Krohn Kenneth A
University of Washington and Seattle Cancer Care Alliance, Seattle, Washington , USA.
Clin Cancer Res. 2007 Jun 15;13(12):3460-9. doi: 10.1158/1078-0432.CCR-07-0074.
Biochemical and molecular imaging of cancer using positron emission tomography (PET) plays an increasing role in the care of cancer patients. Most clinical work to date uses the glucose analogue [(18)F]fluorodeoxyglucose (FDG) to detect accelerated and aberrant glycolysis present in most tumors. Although clinical FDG PET has been used largely to detect and localize cancer, more detailed studies have yielded biological insights and showed the utility of FDG as a prognostic marker and as a tool for therapeutic response evaluation. As cancer therapy becomes more targeted and individualized, it is likely that PET radiopharmaceuticals other than FDG, aimed at more specific aspects of cancer biology, will also play a role in guiding cancer therapy. Clinical trials designed to test and validate new PET agents will need to incorporate rigorous quantitative image analysis and adapt to the evolving use of imaging as a biomarker and will need to incorporate cancer outcomes, such as survival into study design.
使用正电子发射断层扫描(PET)对癌症进行生物化学和分子成像在癌症患者护理中发挥着越来越重要的作用。迄今为止,大多数临床工作使用葡萄糖类似物[(18)F]氟脱氧葡萄糖(FDG)来检测大多数肿瘤中存在的加速和异常糖酵解。尽管临床FDG PET主要用于检测和定位癌症,但更详细的研究已获得生物学见解,并显示FDG作为预后标志物和治疗反应评估工具的效用。随着癌症治疗变得更加靶向和个体化,旨在针对癌症生物学更具体方面的除FDG之外的PET放射性药物也可能在指导癌症治疗中发挥作用。旨在测试和验证新PET药物的临床试验将需要纳入严格的定量图像分析,并适应成像作为生物标志物的不断发展的用途,并且需要将癌症结局,如生存率纳入研究设计。