Department of Medical Oncology, University Hospital of Ioannina, Ioannina, Greece.
Nuclear Medicine Department, University Hospital of Ioannina, Ioannina, Greece.
Cancer Treat Res Commun. 2021;28:100441. doi: 10.1016/j.ctarc.2021.100441. Epub 2021 Aug 8.
Immuno-oncology (IO) with immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICIs) is the new landmark in cancer treatment. However, due to its economical-related burden and the possibility of tumor pseudoprogression with late response patterns, it is imperative to find new ways for early discrimination of patients with IO-sensitive versus IO-resistant disease. ICI-mediated antitumor responses depend on tumor immune infiltration by T-cells capable of recognizing and killing tumor cells. Nevertheless, patients may experience different responses to immunotherapy according to their tumor microenvironment and inflammatory infiltration. T-cell infiltrated tumors are referred to as 'hot' and are potential candidates for a good response to ICIs, whereas 'cold' are those tumors lacking T-cell infiltration and exhibit a narrow likelihood of response to IO therapy. Gallium-67 (Ga) scintigraphy may hold potential for separating 'hot' from 'cold' tumors, thus providing an imaging tool to distinguish 'hot' ICI-induced pseudoprogression from real early 'cold' progression. Even so, various tumors (lymphomas, lung cancer, breast cancer, hepatoma, malignant melanoma) exhibit an inherent affinity for Ga that is independent of the ICI-induced immune infiltration, and this raises issues about false positivity. For that reason, future investigational studies to evaluate the prospective role of this radiotracer in the early prediction of ICI response should be confined to tumors with an inherently low Ga affinity (thyroid carcinoma, gastrointestinal and genitourinary tract tumors). We describe our experience with a patient with recurrent metastatic lung adenocarcinoma under ICI therapy that was submitted to Ga scanning for a fever of unknown origin and we discuss the aforementioned topics, alongside current imaging trends and future perspectives in the field.
免疫肿瘤学(IO)联合免疫检查点抑制剂(ICIs)是癌症治疗的新里程碑。然而,由于其与经济相关的负担以及肿瘤假性进展的可能性,即具有延迟反应模式,因此迫切需要寻找新的方法来早期区分对 IO 敏感与对 IO 耐药的疾病患者。ICI 介导的抗肿瘤反应取决于能够识别和杀死肿瘤细胞的 T 细胞对肿瘤的免疫浸润。然而,根据肿瘤微环境和炎症浸润,患者可能对免疫疗法有不同的反应。T 细胞浸润的肿瘤被称为“热肿瘤”,是对 ICI 有良好反应的潜在候选者,而缺乏 T 细胞浸润的肿瘤则表现出对 IO 治疗反应狭窄的可能性。镓-67(Ga)闪烁扫描可能有潜力将“热肿瘤”与“冷肿瘤”区分开来,从而提供一种成像工具来区分 ICI 诱导的假性进展与真正的早期“冷”进展。即便如此,各种肿瘤(淋巴瘤、肺癌、乳腺癌、肝癌、恶性黑色素瘤)对 Ga 具有固有亲和力,与 ICI 诱导的免疫浸润无关,这引发了关于假阳性的问题。因此,评估这种示踪剂在早期预测 ICI 反应中的潜在作用的未来研究性研究应仅限于固有 Ga 亲和力低的肿瘤(甲状腺癌、胃肠道和泌尿生殖道肿瘤)。我们描述了一名接受 ICI 治疗的复发性转移性肺腺癌患者的经验,该患者因不明原因发热接受了 Ga 扫描,我们讨论了上述主题,以及当前的成像趋势和该领域的未来展望。