Identification of patient sub-groups with smoldering multiple myeloma (SMM) at high risk of progression to active disease (MM) is an important goal. 18F-FDG PET/CT (positron emission tomography (PET) integrated with computed tomography (PET/CT) using glucose labelled with the positron-emitting radionuclide (18)F) allows for assessing early skeletal involvement. Identification of osteolytic lesions by this technique has recently been incorporated into the updated International Myeloma Working Group criteria for MM diagnosis. However, no data are available regarding the impact of focal lesions (FLs) without underlying osteolysis on time to progression (TTP) to MM. We hence prospectively studied a cohort of 120 SMM patients with PET/CT. PET/CT was positive in 16% of patients (1 FL: 8, 2 FLs: 3, >3 FLs: 6, diffuse bone marrow involvement: 2). With a median follow-up of 2.2 years, 38% of patients progressed to MM, in a median time of 4 years, including 21% with skeletal involvement. The risk of progression of those with positive PET/CT was 3.00 (95% confidence interval 1.58-5.69, P=0.001), with a median TTP of 1.1 versus 4.5 years for PET/CT-negative patients. The probability of progression within 2 years was 58% for positive versus 33% for negative patients. In conclusion, PET/CT positivity significantly increased the risk of progression of SMM to MM. PET/CT could become a new tool to define high-risk SMM.
The increasingly popular use of somatostatin analogs in clinical practice for both diagnostic and therapeutic purposes prompted extensive investigations on somatostatin receptor (sst) expression in human tumors by autoradiography, nucleic acid analysis and, recently, immunohistochemistry (IHC). The currently employed radiotracer for scintigraphy (Octreoscan) is octreotide, a somatostatin analog having a high affinity for sst types 2, 3, and 5. In this study on 25 patients, we compared sst 2, 3, and 5 expression in surgical and biopsy specimens of lung tumors, as revealed by immunohistochemical and reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR), with the octreoscan outcome (which was positive in 20/25 cases). By IHC, the tumors mainly expressed sst2 (17/25, 68%) at the cell membrane level, while sst 3 and 5 were detected in a fraction of cases (24% and 20%, respectively). Comparing RT-PCR and IHC data, a correlation was found in 83.3% of cases, while octreoscan findings and sst expression were correlated in 22/25 cases (88%). In addition, cytological and biopsy specimens expressed the same sst type found in the corresponding surgical sample, thus indicating that a cell membrane sst immunoreactivity in a biopsy reliably predicts the tumor-receptor profile before its resection. Finally, sst expression was not restricted to neuroendocrine lung tumors, but was also a feature of some non-neuroendocrine carcinomas, although to a lesser extent. The occasional expression of sst subtypes in intratumoral lymphocytes, endothelia and necrotic areas is an additional feature to be considered in the interpretation of Octreoscan findings, since the in vivo procedure does not allow to define the sst cellular distribution. IHC can therefore be usefully coupled to radionuclear investigations to better characterize the sst cellular location and subtype in lung tumors.
IMPeTUs criteria proved highly reproducible and could therefore be considered as a base for harmonizing PET interpretation in multiple myeloma. A prospective clinical validation of IMPeTUs criteria is underway.
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