Department of Radiology, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109, USA.
J Nucl Med. 2010 Jul;51(7):1155-62. doi: 10.2967/jnumed.110.075176. Epub 2010 Jun 16.
For optimal treatment planning in radionuclide therapy, robust tumor dose-response correlations must be established. Here, fully 3-dimensional (3D) dosimetry was performed coupling SPECT/CT at multiple time points with Monte Carlo-based voxel-by-voxel dosimetry to examine such correlations.
Twenty patients undergoing (131)I-tositumomab for the treatment of refractory B-cell lymphoma volunteered for the study. Sixty tumors were imaged. Activity quantification and dosimetry were performed using previously developed 3D algorithms for SPECT reconstruction and absorbed dose estimation. Tumors were outlined on CT at multiple time points to obtain absorbed dose distributions in the presence of tumor deformation and regression. Equivalent uniform dose (EUD) was calculated to assess the biologic effects of the nonuniform absorbed dose, including the cold antibody effect. Response for correlation analysis was determined on the basis of the percentage reduction in the product of the largest perpendicular tumor diameters on CT at 2 mo. Overall response classification (as complete response, partial response, stable disease, or progressive disease) used for prediction analysis was based on criteria that included findings on PET.
Of the evaluated tumor-absorbed dose summary measures (mean absorbed dose, EUD, and other measures from dose-volume histogram analysis), a statistically significant correlation with response was seen only with EUD (r = 0.36 and P = 0.006 at the individual tumor level; r = 0.46 and P = 0.048 at the patient level). The median value of mean absorbed dose for stable disease, partial response, and complete response patients was 196, 346, and 342 cGy, respectively, whereas the median value of EUD for each of these categories was 170, 363, and 406 cGy, respectively. At a threshold of 200 cGy, both mean absorbed dose and EUD had a positive predictive value for responders (partial response + complete response) of 0.875 (14/16) and a negative predictive value of 1.0 (3/3).
Improved dose-response correlations were demonstrated when EUD incorporating the cold antibody effect was used instead of the conventionally used mean tumor-absorbed dose. This work demonstrates the importance of 3D calculation and radiobiologic modeling when estimating absorbed dose for correlation with outcome.
为了实现放射性核素治疗的最佳计划,必须建立稳健的肿瘤剂量反应相关性。本研究通过结合 SPECT/CT 在多个时间点的全三维(3D)剂量测定和基于蒙特卡罗的体素剂量测定,来检验这些相关性。
20 名接受(131)I-替妥莫单抗治疗难治性 B 细胞淋巴瘤的患者自愿参加了这项研究。对 60 个肿瘤进行了成像。使用先前开发的用于 SPECT 重建和吸收剂量估算的 3D 算法进行了活性定量和剂量测定。在 CT 上对多个时间点的肿瘤进行轮廓勾画,以获得存在肿瘤变形和消退的吸收剂量分布。计算等效均匀剂量(EUD)以评估非均匀吸收剂量的生物学效应,包括冷抗体效应。根据 2 个月时 CT 上最大垂直肿瘤直径乘积的降低百分比确定相关性分析的反应。用于预测分析的整体反应分类(完全缓解、部分缓解、稳定疾病或进展性疾病)基于包括 PET 发现的标准。
在评估的肿瘤吸收剂量总结指标(平均吸收剂量、EUD 和剂量-体积直方图分析中的其他指标)中,仅与 EUD 存在统计学显著相关性(个体肿瘤水平 r = 0.36,P = 0.006;患者水平 r = 0.46,P = 0.048)。稳定疾病、部分缓解和完全缓解患者的平均吸收剂量中位数分别为 196、346 和 342 cGy,而这些类别的 EUD 中位数分别为 170、363 和 406 cGy。当阈值为 200 cGy 时,平均吸收剂量和 EUD 对反应者(部分缓解+完全缓解)的阳性预测值分别为 0.875(14/16)和 1.0(3/3),阴性预测值分别为 1.0。
当使用包含冷抗体效应的 EUD 代替常规使用的平均肿瘤吸收剂量时,剂量反应相关性得到了改善。这项工作证明了在估计与结果相关的吸收剂量时,使用 3D 计算和放射生物学建模的重要性。