Kaya Zühre, Akdemir Ozgür Umit, Atay Ozlem Lütfiye, Akyürek Nalan, Pınarlı Faruk Güçlü, Yenicesu İdil, Koçak Ülker
a Department of Pediatrics, Pediatric Hematology Unit , Gazi University, Faculty of Medicine , Ankara , Turkey.
b Departments of Nuclear Medicine , Gazi University, Faculty of Medicine , Ankara , Turkey.
Pediatr Hematol Oncol. 2018 Oct-Nov;35(7-8):393-406. doi: 10.1080/08880018.2018.1557306. Epub 2019 Jan 18.
Few data are available on the clinical significance of 18-fluorodeoxyglucose positron emission tomography (FDG-PET/CT) results in patients with leukemia. We investigated the utility of FDG-PET/CT at the time of relapsed/refractory disease in pediatric patients with leukemia.
Medical records of 28 children with suspected leukemia progression or recurrence during/after chemotherapy or allogeneic stem cell transplantation (allo-SCT) were retrospectively reviewed to determine the utility of FDG-PET/CT.
Twenty-two of the 28 patients have documented abnormal imaging findings during clinical follow-up, while six had were interpreted as not demonstrating signal consistent with active leukemia. Of the 22 patients with abnormal FDG-PET/CT studies 14 were found to have FDG-PET/CT reported as consistent with active leukemia and increased leukemia blasts on bone marrow biopsy. Regarding the eight patients without positive FDG-PET/CT and proven leukemia relapse, four had discordant findings on FDG-PET/CT and biopsy, and four had FDG-PET/CT reported as infection. Mean maximum standardized uptake values (SUVmax) were significantly higher among patients whose FDG-PET/CT findings were positive for leukemia as opposed to infectious disease (p < .05). Mean SUVmax was also significantly higher among patients with multifocal lesions on FDG-PET/CT than among those with diffuse lesions (p < .05).
The findings suggest that FDG-PET/CT may be a complementary imaging modality that could be combined with bone marrow examination to improve detection of subtle leukemic infiltration in children with suspected leukemia progression or recurrence after chemotherapy or allo-SCT.
关于18-氟脱氧葡萄糖正电子发射断层扫描(FDG-PET/CT)结果在白血病患者中的临床意义,现有数据较少。我们研究了FDG-PET/CT在小儿白血病复发/难治性疾病时的应用价值。
回顾性分析28例在化疗期间/后或异基因造血干细胞移植(allo-SCT)后疑似白血病进展或复发患儿的病历,以确定FDG-PET/CT的应用价值。
28例患者中有22例在临床随访期间有影像学异常记录,6例被解释为未显示与活动性白血病一致的信号。在22例FDG-PET/CT检查异常的患者中,14例的FDG-PET/CT报告与活动性白血病一致,骨髓活检显示白血病原始细胞增多。在8例FDG-PET/CT未呈阳性且未证实白血病复发的患者中,4例在FDG-PET/CT和活检结果上存在不一致,4例FDG-PET/CT报告为感染。与感染性疾病患者相比,FDG-PET/CT结果呈白血病阳性的患者平均最大标准化摄取值(SUVmax)显著更高(p < 0.05)。FDG-PET/CT有多灶性病变的患者的平均SUVmax也显著高于有弥漫性病变的患者(p < 0.05)。
研究结果表明,FDG-PET/CT可能是一种辅助成像方式,可与骨髓检查相结合,以提高对化疗或allo-SCT后疑似白血病进展或复发患儿细微白血病浸润的检测。