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The variable clinical outcome of patients with G2 & G3 well diff GEP-NETs makes the selection of an optimal treatment strategy challenging.
Initial data suggests that high DOTATATE uptake and low FDG uptake are suggestive of low grade disease, with an indolent course.
Conversely, low DT uptake and high FDG uptake are suggestive of high-grade/ aggressive disease.
G2/3 GEP NETs may be biologically diverse; clinically relevant cohort for dual-tracer PET imaging.
Our secondary objectives are
To assess intra-individual variability in SSTR expression & glucose metabolism (as seen on DT and FDG PET) across different tumor sites within the same patient.
To determine whether a correlation exists between tumor texture features on 68Ga-DT & FDG PET to tumor grade and Ki 67 index.
To assess for an association between tumor texture features on 68Ga-DT PET and glucose metabolism; and/or an association between tumor texture features on FDG PET and SSTR expression.
Full description
The variable clinical outcome of patients with G2 and G3 well differentiated GEP-NETs makes the selection of an optimal treatment strategy challenging.
A subject with 68Ga-DOTATATE uptake on all lesions without FDG uptake is likely to have low-grade, metabolically inactive disease, leading to an indolent disease course and may also be a predictive biomarker in subjects being considered for PRRT.
Conversely, avidity on 18F-FDG PET/CT and non-avidity on 68Ga-DOTATATE may indicate a high-grade NET, and would predict resistance to PRRT, suggesting that a more "aggressive" approach with systemic chemotherapy might be beneficial.
Therefore, the prospective assessment of PETNET score in patients with G2 or G3 GEP NETs, which may be biologically diverse is the most clinically relevant group for dual-tracer PET imaging.
Primary Objectives:
Secondary Objectives:
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40 participants in 1 patient group
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Ur Metser, MD; Patrick Veit-Haibach, MD
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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