Cancers (Aug 2021)

First Comparison between [18f]-FMISO and [18f]-Faza for Preoperative Pet Imaging of Hypoxia in Lung Cancer

  • Sébastien Thureau,
  • Nicolas Piton,
  • Pierrick Gouel,
  • Romain Modzelewski,
  • Antoine Dujon,
  • Jean-Marc Baste,
  • Jean Melki,
  • Philippe Rinieri,
  • Christophe Peillon,
  • Olivier Rastelli,
  • Justine Lequesne,
  • Sébastien Hapdey,
  • Jean-Christophe Sabourin,
  • Pierre Bohn,
  • Pierre Vera

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers13164101
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 16
p. 4101

Abstract

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Hypoxic areas are typically resistant to treatment. However, the fluorine-18-fluoroazomycin-arabinoside (FAZA) and fluorine 18 misonidazole (FMISO) tracers have never been compared in non small cell lung cancer (NSCLC). This study compares the capability of 18F-FAZA PET/CT with that of 18F-FMISO PET/CT for detecting hypoxic tumour regions in early and locally advanced NSCLC patients. We prospectively evaluated patients who underwent preoperative PET scans before surgery for localised NSCLC (i.e., fluorodeoxyglucose (FDG)-PET, FMISO-PET, and FAZA-PET). The PET data of the three tracers were compared with each other and then compared to immunohistochemical analysis (GLUT-1, CAIX, LDH-5, and HIF1-Alpha) after tumour resection. Overall, 19 patients with a mean age of 68.2 ± 8 years were included. There were 18 lesions with significant uptake (i.e., SUVmax >1.4) for the F-MISO and 17 for FAZA. The mean SUVmax was 3 (±1.4) with a mean volume of 25.8 cc (±25.8) for FMISO and 2.2 (±0.7) with a mean volume of 13.06 cc (±13.76) for FAZA. The SUVmax of F-MISO was greater than that of FAZA (p = 0.0003). The SUVmax of F-MISO shows a good correlation with that of FAZA at 0.86 (0.66–0.94). Immunohistochemical results are not correlated to hypoxia PET regardless of the staining. The two tracers show a good correlation with hypoxia, with FMISO being superior to FAZA. FMISO, therefore, remains the reference tracer for defining hypoxic volumes.

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