Theruvath Ashok J, Ilivitzki Anat, Muehe Anne, Theruvath Johanna, Gulaka Praveen, Kim Christine, Luna-Fineman Sandra, Sakamoto Kathleen M, Yeom Kristen W, Yang Phillip, Moseley Michael, Chan Frandics, Daldrup-Link Heike E
From the Department of Radiology and the Molecular Imaging Program (A.J.T., A.I., A.M., J.T., P.G., C.K., K.W.Y., M.M., F.C., H.E.D.L.), Department of Pediatrics, Division of Pediatric Hematology/Oncology (S.L.F., K.M.S., H.E.D.L.), and Department of Medicine, Division of Cardiology (P.Y.), Lucile Packard Children's Hospital, Stanford University School of Medicine, 725 Welch Rd, Stanford, CA 94305-5654.
Radiology. 2017 Dec;285(3):971-979. doi: 10.1148/radiol.2017170073. Epub 2017 Aug 4.
Purpose To develop a positron emission tomography (PET)/magnetic resonance (MR) imaging protocol for evaluation of the brain, heart, and joints of pediatric cancer survivors for chemotherapy-induced injuries in one session. Materials and Methods Three teams of experts in neuroimaging, cardiac imaging, and bone imaging were tasked to develop a 20-30-minute PET/MR imaging protocol for detection of chemotherapy-induced tissue injuries of the brain, heart, and bone. In an institutional review board-approved, HIPAA-compliant, prospective study from April to July 2016, 10 pediatric cancer survivors who completed chemotherapy underwent imaging of the brain, heart, and bone with a 3-T PET/MR imager. Cumulative chemotherapy doses and clinical symptoms were correlated with the severity of MR imaging abnormalities by using linear regression analyses. MR imaging measures of brain perfusion and metabolism were compared among eight patients who were treated with methotrexate and eight untreated age-matched control subjects by using Wilcoxon rank-sum tests. Results Combined brain, heart, and bone examinations were completed within 90 minutes. Eight of 10 cancer survivors had abnormal findings on brain, heart, and bone images, including six patients with and two patients without clinical symptoms. Cumulative chemotherapy doses correlated significantly with MR imaging measures of left ventricular ejection fraction and end-systolic volume, but not with the severity of brain or bone abnormalities. Methotrexate-treated cancer survivors had significantly lower cerebral blood flow and metabolic activity in key brain areas compared with control subjects. Conclusion The feasibility of a single examination for assessment of chemotherapy-induced injuries of the brain, heart, and joints was shown. Earlier detection of tissue injuries may enable initiation of timely interventions and help to preserve long-term health of pediatric cancer survivors. RSNA, 2017 Online supplemental material is available for this article.
制定一种正电子发射断层扫描(PET)/磁共振(MR)成像方案,用于在一次检查中评估儿童癌症幸存者的脑、心脏和关节,以检测化疗引起的损伤。材料与方法:神经成像、心脏成像和骨成像领域的三个专家团队负责制定一个20 - 30分钟的PET/MR成像方案,以检测脑、心脏和骨骼的化疗引起的组织损伤。在一项经机构审查委员会批准、符合健康保险流通与责任法案(HIPAA)的前瞻性研究中,2016年4月至7月,10名完成化疗的儿童癌症幸存者使用3-T PET/MR成像仪对脑、心脏和骨骼进行成像。通过线性回归分析,将累积化疗剂量和临床症状与MR成像异常的严重程度相关联。使用Wilcoxon秩和检验比较了8名接受甲氨蝶呤治疗的患者和8名未治疗的年龄匹配对照受试者的脑灌注和代谢的MR成像测量值。结果:脑、心脏和骨骼的联合检查在90分钟内完成。10名癌症幸存者中有8人在脑、心脏和骨骼图像上有异常发现,其中6名患者有临床症状,2名患者无临床症状。累积化疗剂量与左心室射血分数和收缩末期容积的MR成像测量值显著相关,但与脑或骨骼异常的严重程度无关。与对照受试者相比,接受甲氨蝶呤治疗的癌症幸存者在关键脑区的脑血流量和代谢活性显著降低。结论:显示了单次检查评估化疗引起的脑、心脏和关节损伤的可行性。早期检测组织损伤可能有助于及时启动干预措施,并有助于保护儿童癌症幸存者的长期健康。RSNA,2017 本文提供在线补充材料。