Frontiers in Medicine (Dec 2022)

Does 18F-FDG PET/CT add value to conventional imaging in clinical assessment of chronic disseminated candidiasis?

  • Blandine Rammaert,
  • Christophe Maunoury,
  • Tioka Rabeony,
  • Jean-Michel Correas,
  • Caroline Elie,
  • Serge Alfandari,
  • Pierre Berger,
  • Marie-Thérèse Rubio,
  • Thorsten Braun,
  • Prissile Bakouboula,
  • Sophie Candon,
  • Françoise Montravers,
  • Olivier Lortholary,
  • Olivier Lortholary

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fmed.2022.1026067
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9

Abstract

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BackgroundChronic disseminated candidiasis (CDC) classically occurs after profound and prolonged neutropenia. The aim of the CANHPARI study was to assess the clinical value of adding 18F-fluorodeoxyglucose PET/CT to conventional radiology for initial and subsequent evaluations of CDC.Materials and methodsA pilot prospective study was conducted in 23 French onco-hematological centers from 2013 to 2017 (NCT01916057). Patients ≥ 18 y.o. suspected for CDC on abdominal conventional imaging (CT or MRI) were included. PET/CT and conventional imaging were performed at baseline and month 3 (M3). Follow-up was assessed until M12. The primary outcome measure was the global response at M3, i.e., apyrexia and complete response to PET/CT. The secondary outcome measure consists in comparison between responses to PET/CT and conventional imaging at diagnosis and M3.ResultsAmong 52 included patients, 44 were evaluable (20 probable and 24 possible CDC); 86% had acute leukemia, 55% were male (median age 47 years). At diagnosis, 34% had fever and conventional imaging was always abnormal with microabscesses on liver and spleen in 66%, liver in 25%, spleen in 9%. Baseline PET/CT showed metabolic uptake on liver and/or spleen in 84% but did not match with lesion localizations on conventional imaging in 32%. M3 PET/CT showed no metabolic uptake in 13 (34%) patients, 11 still having pathological conventional imaging. Global response at M3 was observed in eight patients.ConclusionBaseline PET/CT does not replace conventional imaging for initial staging of CDC lesions but should be performed after 3 months of antifungal therapy.Clinical trial registration[www.clinicaltrials.gov], identifier [NCT01916057].

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