Kuruva Manohar, Mittal Bhagwant Rai, Abrar Mohammed Labeeb, Kashyap Raghava, Bhattacharya Anish
Department of Nuclear Medicine and PET, Postgraduate Institute of Medical Education and Research, Chandigarh, India.
Indian J Nucl Med. 2012 Jan;27(1):20-3. doi: 10.4103/0972-3919.108835.
Standardized uptake value (SUV) is the most commonly used semi-quantitative PET parameter. Various response assessment criteria grade the tumor uptake relative to liver or mediastinal uptake. However various factors can affect the background SUV values. This prospective study was carried out to assess the variability of liver and mediastinal SUVs normalized to lean body mass (SUL-L, SUL-M), body surface area (SUB-L, SUB-M), and body weight (SUW-L, SUW-M) and their dependence on various factors which can affect SUV values.
Eighty-eight patients who underwent F-18 FDG PET/CT for various oncological indications were prospectively included in this study. SUVs of liver and mediastinum were calculated by ROIs drawn as suggested by Wahl, et al., in PERCIST 1.0 criteria. Multivariate linear regression analysis was done to assess for the various factors influencing the SUVs of liver and mediastinum. Factors assessed were age, sex, weight, blood glucose level, diabetic status, and uptake period. A P value less than 0.01 was considered significant.
SUL-L, SUL-M, SUB-L, SUB-M, SUW-L, SUW-M were not affected significantly by age, sex, blood glucose levels, diabetic status. The uptake period had a statistically significant effect on SUL-L (P = 0.007) and SUW-L (P = 0.008) with a progressive decrease with increasing uptake time. Body weight showed a statistically significant effect on SUW-L (P = 0.001) while SUL-L and SUB-L were not dependent on weight. SUB-L was least dependent on weight (P = 0.851) when compared with SUL-L (P = 0.425). However SUL-L was also not affected statistically significantly by variations in body weight (P = 0.425). Mediastinal SUVs were not significantly affected by any of the factors.
As mediastinal SUVs are not affected significantly by any of the factors, it can be considered as background when wide variations occur in uptake times or weight of the patient when comparing two PET/CT studies to evaluate response.
标准化摄取值(SUV)是最常用的半定量PET参数。各种反应评估标准根据肿瘤摄取相对于肝脏或纵隔摄取的情况进行分级。然而,多种因素会影响背景SUV值。本前瞻性研究旨在评估以瘦体重(SUL-L、SUL-M)、体表面积(SUB-L、SUB-M)和体重(SUW-L、SUW-M)标准化的肝脏和纵隔SUV的变异性及其对可能影响SUV值的各种因素的依赖性。
本前瞻性研究纳入了88例因各种肿瘤适应症接受F-18 FDG PET/CT检查的患者。肝脏和纵隔的SUV通过按照瓦尔等人在PERCIST 1.0标准中建议绘制的感兴趣区(ROI)进行计算。进行多变量线性回归分析以评估影响肝脏和纵隔SUV的各种因素。评估的因素包括年龄、性别、体重、血糖水平、糖尿病状态和摄取期。P值小于0.01被认为具有统计学意义。
SUL-L、SUL-M、SUB-L、SUB-M、SUW-L、SUW-M不受年龄、性别、血糖水平、糖尿病状态的显著影响。摄取期对SUL-L(P = 0.007)和SUW-L(P = 0.008)有统计学显著影响,随着摄取时间增加呈逐渐下降趋势。体重对SUW-L有统计学显著影响(P = 0.001),而SUL-L和SUB-L不依赖于体重。与SUL-L(P = 0.425)相比,SUB-L对体重的依赖性最小(P = 0.851)。然而,体重变化对SUL-L也没有统计学显著影响(P = 0.425)。纵隔SUV不受任何因素的显著影响。
由于纵隔SUV不受任何因素的显著影响,在比较两项PET/CT研究以评估反应时,当患者的摄取时间或体重出现较大变化时,可将其视为背景。