Objective
To devise a simple PET-CT score for measurement of muscle disease activity in patients with inflammatory myopathies (IMs) and to assess its validity.
Methods
A total of 44 PET-CT examinations in 34 IM patients (performed during cancer screening) and 20 PET-CT examinations in matched controls (investigated for pulmonary nodules with a conclusion of benignity) were analysed. Maximal standardized uptake values (SUVmax) were recorded bilaterally in eight proximal muscles. The muscle SUVmax (mSUVmax) was defined as the average of the 16 muscle SUVmax values, normalized on the liver mean SUV. Reliability, validity and responsiveness were evaluated.
Results
The mSUVmax was increased in IM patients compared with controls. This index allowed the identification of patients with high vs low muscle disease activity using the myositis intention to treat activity index as the gold standard. In patients with subsequent examinations, our method showed good accuracy to detect changes in muscle disease activity [area under the curve 0.96 (95% CI 0.84, 1)]. Responsiveness was strong. Interrater reliability was excellent.
Conclusion
PET-CT, a non-invasive tool useful for cancer screening, is also valuable to measure muscle disease activity and its evolution in IM patients.
We report a case of a 69-year-old woman with primary hyperoxaluria type I, who developed a severe hypercalcemia despite controlled secondary hyperparathyroidism. Bone scintigraphy showed diffuse increased uptake in axial and peripheral skeleton. 18F-FDG PET/CT showed countless striking hypermetabolic foci, interesting 2 types of lesions (joint calcifications and periosteal resorptions). Bone biopsy demonstrated inflammatory changes around many calcium oxalate crystals; hypercalcemia was then related to oxalate osteopathy. Immunotherapy with denosumab was thus initiated. Eighteen months later, a second PET/CT showed decreased 18F-FDG uptake, reflecting treatment efficacy on inflammatory reaction secondary to calcium oxalosis skeletal deposits.
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