In patients with endometrial cancer, it is feasible to use lymphatic mapping and SLN biopsy to define the topographic distribution of the lymphatic network and also to accurately detect lumbo-aortic and pelvic metastases within SLNs. In the majority of patients with early stage endometrial cancer, this procedure may avoid unnecessary radical pelvic lymphadenectomy. It may also guide para-aortic lymph node dissection on the basis of the SLN status.
Glioblastoma multiforme (GBM) is the most common primary malignant brain tumor in adults with a median survival time less than one year. To date, there are only a limited number of effective agents available for GBM therapy and this does not seem to add much survival advantage over the conventional approach based on surgery and radiotherapy. Therefore, the development of novel therapeutic approaches to GBM is essential and those based on radionuclide therapy could be of significant clinical impact. Experimental evidence has clearly demonstrated that cancer cells have a particularly high fractional content of copper inside the nucleus compared to normal cells. This behavior can be conveniently exploited both for diagnosis and for delivering therapeutic payloads (theranostic) of the radionuclide copper-64 into the nucleus of cancerous cells by intravenous administration of its simplest chemical form as dichloride salt [64Cu]CuCl2. To evaluate the potential theranostic role of [64Cu]CuCl2 in GBM, the present work reports results from a preclinical study carried out in a xenografted GBM tumor mouse model. Biodistribution data of this new agent were collected using a small-animal PET tomograph. Subsequently, groups of tumor implanted nude mice were treated with [64Cu]CuCl2 to simulate single- and multiple-dose therapy protocols, and results were analyzed to estimate therapeutic efficacy.
The aim of this study was to assess the feasibility of somatostatin receptor scintigraphy (SRS) for the detection of the site of unknown primary neuroendocrine neoplasms in patients in whom clinical examination and conventional radiological imaging had failed to do so. From 1996 to 2000, 36 patients were referred with gastro-entero-pancreatic (GEP) neuroendocrine tumours. In these patients, no clinical, radiological or endoscopic diagnostic modalities had been able to identify the primary tumour. Twenty-nine patients had liver metastases. Of the others, one had skin and one had lymph node metastases, three had diffuse metastatic involvement and two had carcinoid syndrome. SRS was carried out with both whole-body and single-photon emission tomography (SPET) acquisition, 24 and 48 h after the intravenous administration of In-pentetreotide. SRS findings were suggestive of the possible site of the primary lesion in 14 patients (39%). Six patients underwent surgery on the basis of the SRS findings and, therefore, the final, i.e. pathological, diagnosis was reached. In two patients, the final diagnosis was obtained within 6 months of SRS by means of a follow-up computed tomography (CT) scan. In the remaining six patients, the final diagnosis was reached after at least 2 years of follow-up by means of clinical, radiological and/or nuclear medicine findings. In all eight patients, the primary site identified during follow-up was consistent with the SRS findings. It can be concluded that SRS modified management in the six patients who had surgery. However, the most important finding was that SRS prompted surgical management in 17% of cases.
The incidence of COVID-19, a severe acute respiratory syndrome caused by SARS-CoV-2, is rapidly growing worldwide. In this pandemic period, the chance of incidental pulmonary findings suggestive of COVID-19 at 18F-FDG PET/CT in asymptomatic oncological patients is not negligible. To suspect COVID-19 is more demanding whether its presentation is atypical. We describe the incidental PET/CT detection of an 18F-FDG–avid isolated centrilobular pulmonary consolidation in an asymptomatic lymphoma patient, which later resulted in an unexpected and atypical COVID-19 presentation. The nuclear medicine physicians should be prepared to suspect COVID-19 even in asymptomatic patients presenting with a “far-from-COVID-19” finding at PET/CT.
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