Background: 18 F-fluorocholine positron emission tomography/computed tomography (F-choline PET/ CT) is considered a cornerstone in the staging and restaging of patients with prostate cancer (PCa). The aim of this study was to retrospectively assess unusual uptakes in patients who underwent a F-choline PET/CT for the initial staging or for the restaging of a relapsing PCa.Methods: Three hundred and sixty-eight PCa patients were staged or restaged using F-choline PET/CT.Unusual uptakes were defined as uptakes occurring outside the usual paths of diffusion of PCa or as uptake in bone with a clear morphological evidence of nonmetastatic lesion.
Results:We found unusual uptakes in 47/368 patients (12.8%). Among them, 41/47 presented with benign F-choline uptake, usually within lymph nodes, due to inflammatory processes (22/47). Other benign processes were found in: thyroid (3/47), adrenal gland (3/47), brain (2/47), liver (1/47), bowel (3/47), frontal sinus (1/47), lungs (4/47), parotid gland (1/47) and bone (1/47). The six remaining patients presented with a second cancer, including lymphoma (1/47), non-small cell lung cancer (4/47) and neuroendocrine tumor (1/47).Conclusions: unusual uptakes on F-choline PET/CT are quite frequent and should be explored since they may correspond to non-PCa.
Pediatric patients with cancer are at high risk for severe infections and delayed treatment increases mortality. Infections can trigger changes of vital signs long before clinical symptoms arise. Continuous recording may detect such changes earlier than discrete measurements. This is the protocol for an investigator-initiated, single-center observational pilot study on the feasibility of continuous monitoring of health data with a wearable device (WD) in pediatric patients undergoing chemotherapy of cancer. A total of 20 patients will be included, including at least 4 patients <6 years. Each patient will wear the WD for 14 days and we expect study duration of three to four months. The protocol had been registered at www.clinicaltrials.com (NCT04134429) and was approved by the local Ethics Committees (Ethikkommission der Universitätskinderkliniken Bern, “Gesuch 1912”, Kantonale Ethikkommission Bern, BASEC-No.: 2019-01919).
Gastrointestinal events in patients treated with docetaxel may be a potential sign of fatal enterocolitis and require particular attention. Dose reduction at the first cycle may reduce the risk of such events.
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