Pharmacokinetic analysis of hypoxia 18F-fluoromisonidazole dynamic PET in head and neck cancer Journal Article


Authors: Wang, W.; Lee, N. Y.; Georgi, J. C.; Narayanan, M.; Guillem, J.; Schoder, H.; Humm, J. L.
Article Title: Pharmacokinetic analysis of hypoxia 18F-fluoromisonidazole dynamic PET in head and neck cancer
Abstract: This study used pharmacokinetic analysis of 18F-labeled fluoromisonidazole (18F-FMISO) dynamic PET to assist the identification of regional tumor hypoxia and to investigate the relationship among a potential tumor hypoxia index (Ki), tumor-to-blood ratio (T/B) in the late-time image, plasma-to-tissue transport rate (k1), and local vascular volume fraction (β) for head and neck cancer patients. Methods: Newly diagnosed patients underwent a dynamic 18F-FMISO PET scan before chemotherapy or radiotherapy. The data were acquired in 3 consecutive PET/CT dynamic scan segments, registered with each other and analyzed using pharmacokinetics software. The (Ki, k1, β) kinetic parameter images were derived for each patient. Results: Nine patients' data were analyzed. Representative images of 18F-FDG PET (of the tumor), CT (of the anatomy), and late-time 18F-FMISO PET (of the T/B) and parametric images of Ki (potentially representing tumor hypoxia) are shown. The patient image data could be classified into 3 types: with good concordance between the parametric hypoxia map Ki and high T/B, with concordant findings between the parametric hypoxia map and low T/B, and with ambiguity between parametric hypoxia map and T/B. Correlation coefficients are computed between each pair of T/B, Ki, k 1, and β. Data are also presented for other potential hypoxia surrogate measures, for example, k3 and k1/k2. Conclusion: There is a positive correlation of 0.86 between the average T/B and average hypoxia index Ki of the region of interest. However, because of the statistical photon counting noise in PET and the amplification of noise in kinetic analysis, the direct correlation between the T/B and hypoxia of the individual pixel is not obvious. For a tumor region of interest, there is a slight negative correlation between k1 and Ki, moderate positive correlation between β and Ki, but no correlation between β and k1. Copyright © 2010 by the Society of Nuclear Medicine, Inc.
Keywords: adult; clinical article; aged; middle aged; neoplasm staging; radiopharmaceuticals; image analysis; hypoxia; head and neck cancer; head and neck neoplasms; computer assisted emission tomography; positron-emission tomography; 1 fluoro 3 (2 nitro 1 imidazolyl) 2 propanol f 18; misonidazole; image processing, computer-assisted; blood volume; pet; drug transport; plasma; anoxia; pharmacokinetics; regional blood flow; 18f-fmiso
Journal Title: Journal of Nuclear Medicine
Volume: 51
Issue: 1
ISSN: 0161-5505
Publisher: Society of Nuclear Medicine  
Date Published: 2010-01-01
Start Page: 37
End Page: 45
Language: English
DOI: 10.2967/jnumed.109.067009
PUBMED: 20008982
PROVIDER: scopus
PMCID: PMC2828684
DOI/URL:
Notes: --- - "Cited By (since 1996): 6" - "Export Date: 20 April 2011" - "CODEN: JNMEA" - "Source: Scopus"
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MSK Authors
  1. Jose Guillem
    414 Guillem
  2. Wenli Wang
    7 Wang
  3. Nancy Y. Lee
    870 Lee
  4. Heiko Schoder
    542 Schoder
  5. John Laurence Humm
    433 Humm