Patient-specific dosimetry for (131)I thyroid cancer therapy using (124)I PET and 3-Dimensional-Internal Dosimetry (3D-ID) software Journal Article


Authors: Sgouros, G.; Kolbert, K. S.; Sheikh, A.; Pentlow, K. S.; Mun, E. F.; Barth, A.; Robbins, R. J.; Larson, S. M.
Article Title: Patient-specific dosimetry for (131)I thyroid cancer therapy using (124)I PET and 3-Dimensional-Internal Dosimetry (3D-ID) software
Abstract: Compared with conventional, whole-organ, S-factor-based dosimetry, 3-dimensional (3D), patient-specific dosimetry better accounts for radionuclide distribution and anatomic patient variability. Its accuracy, however, is limited by the quality of the cumulated activity information that is provided as input. This input has typically been obtained from SPECT and planar imaging studies. The objective was to implement and evaluate PET-based, patient-specific, 3D dosimetry for thyroid cancer patients. Methods: Three to 4 PET imaging studies were obtained over a 7-d period in 15 patients with metastatic thyroid carcinoma after administration of 124I-NaI. Subsequently, patients were treated with 131I on the basis of established clinical parameters. Retrospective dosimetry was performed using registered 124I PET images that were corrected for the half-life difference between 124I and 131I. A voxel-by-voxel integration, over time, of the resulting 131I-equivalent PET-derived images was performed to provide a single 3D dataset representing the spatial distribution of cumulated activity values for each patient. Image manipulation and registration were performed using Multiple Image Analysis Utility (MIAU), a software package developed previously. The software package, 3D-Internal Dosimetry (3D-ID), was used to obtain absorbed dose maps from the cumulated activity image sets. Results: Spatial distributions of absorbed dose, isodose contours, dose-volume histograms (DVHs), and mean absorbed dose estimates were obtained for a total of 56 tumors. Mean absorbed dose values for individual tumors ranged from 1.2 to 540 Gy. The absorbed dose distribution within individual tumors was widely distributed ranging from a minimum of 0.3 to a maximum of 4,000 Gy. Conclusion: 124I PET-based, patient-specific 3D dosimetry is feasible, and sequential PET can be used to obtain cumulated activity images for 3D dosimetry.
Keywords: cancer chemotherapy; clinical article; controlled study; retrospective studies; comparative study; radiation dose; positron emission tomography; methodology; sensitivity and specificity; radiopharmaceuticals; adenocarcinoma; reproducibility; reproducibility of results; metastasis; image analysis; radiotherapy dosage; carcinoma, papillary; validation study; retrospective study; algorithms; feasibility study; iodine 131; diagnostic agent; radioactive iodine; iodine radioisotopes; algorithm; evaluation; feasibility studies; dosimetry; three dimensional imaging; imaging, three-dimensional; radiopharmaceutical agent; scintiscanning; iodine 124; thyroid cancer; thyroid carcinoma; thyroid neoplasms; drug absorption; radiometry; radiotherapy planning, computer-assisted; drug half life; papillary carcinoma; computer assisted radiotherapy; computer program; pet; thyroid tumor; adenocarcinoma, follicular; 124i; sodium iodide i 131; patient-specific dosimetry; human; priority journal; article; 3d-internal dosimetry
Journal Title: Journal of Nuclear Medicine
Volume: 45
Issue: 8
ISSN: 0161-5505
Publisher: Society of Nuclear Medicine  
Date Published: 2004-08-01
Start Page: 1366
End Page: 1372
Language: English
PROVIDER: scopus
PUBMED: 15299063
DOI/URL:
Notes: J. Nucl. Med. -- Cited By (since 1996):135 -- Export Date: 16 June 2014 -- CODEN: JNMEA C2 - 15299063 -- Source: Scopus
Citation Impact
MSK Authors
  1. George Sgouros
    146 Sgouros
  2. Richard J Robbins
    54 Robbins
  3. Arif Sheikh
    7 Sheikh
  4. Katherine S Kolbert
    28 Kolbert
  5. Steven M Larson
    959 Larson
  6. Keith S Pentlow
    70 Pentlow
  7. Edward   Mun
    2 Mun