Journal of Medical Radiation Sciences (Dec 2022)

A pilot study investigating the role of 18F‐FDG‐PET in the early identification of chemoradiotherapy response in anal cancer

  • Drew Smith,
  • Daryl Lim Joon,
  • Kellie Knight,
  • Jenny Sim,
  • Michal Schneider,
  • Eddie Lau,
  • Farshad Foroudi,
  • Vincent Khoo

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1002/jmrs.611
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 69, no. 4
pp. 439 – 447

Abstract

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Abstract Introduction Anal cancer (AC) is 18F‐FDG‐PET avid and has been used to evaluate treatment response several months after chemoradiotherapy. This pilot study aimed to assess the utility of semi‐automated contouring methods and quantitative measures of treatment response using 18F‐FDG‐PET imaging at the early time point of 1‐month post‐chemoradiotherapy. Methods Eleven patients with AC referred for chemoradiotherapy were prospectively enrolled into this study, with 10 meeting eligibility requirements. 18F‐FDG‐PET imaging was obtained pre‐chemoradiotherapy (TP1), and then 1‐month (TP2), 3–6 months (TP3) and 9–12 months (TP4) post‐chemoradiotherapy. Manual and semi‐automated (Threshold) contouring methods were used to define the primary tumour on all 18F‐FDG‐PET images. Resultant contours from each method were interrogated using quantitative measures, including volume, response index (RI), total lesion glycolysis (TLG), SUVmax, SUVmedian and SUVmean. Response was assessed quantitatively as reductions in these measures and also qualitatively against established criteria. Results Nine patients were qualitatively classified as complete metabolic responders at TP2 and all 10 at TP3. All quantitative measures demonstrated significant (P < 0.05) reductions at TP2 for both Manual and Threshold methods. All reduced further at TP3 and again at TP4 for Threshold methods. TLG showed the highest reduction at all post‐chemoradiotherapy time points and classified the most responders for each method at each time point. All patients are recurrence‐free at minimum 4‐year follow‐up. Conclusion Based on our small sample size, semi‐automated methods of disease definition using 18F‐FDG‐PET imaging are feasible and appear to facilitate quantitative response classification of AC as early as 1‐month post‐chemoradiotherapy. Early identification of treatment response may potentially improve disease management.

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