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Indeterminate lung nodules (6-15mm) are frequent findings in patients undergoing chest CT scanning, but adequate follow-up imaging is currently not in place to facilitate early detection, diagnosis and decision making regarding treatment.
The introduction of long Field-Of-View PET/CT scanners could make a difference in this matter due to the substantial increase in sensitivity allowing optimal image quality. Whether this new technology could provide improved detection and follow-up of indeterminate lung nodules is what we aim to explore in this study.
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Indeterminate lung nodules (6-15 mm) are frequent findings in patients undergoing chest Computed Tomography (CT). In the large randomized controlled Dutch-Belgian lung cancer screening trial NELSON, overall, 9.2% of the screened participants had an initially indeterminate CT scan. To decrease mortality from lung cancer, early identification of malignant lesions among the many lung nodules is crucial. The probability of malignancy depends on size and other factors. It is difficult to determine whether a nodule is malignant on size alone. For further differentiation of a lung nodule, usually, repeated chest CT scanning is performed at 3-6 months up to 2 years to assess nodule growth, and/or 2-deoxy-2-[fluorine-18) fluoro-D-glucose (18F-FDG) Positron Emission Tomography (PET)/CT to evaluate metabolic activity. However, repetitive CT scans are not favoured because of radiation exposure, patiënt anxiety, and potential delay in cancer diagnosis. Furthermore, 18F-FDG PET/CT has thus far insufficiënt sensitivity for detection and characterization of small (in particular < 1 cm) lung nodules, meaning that a negative result does not rule out the presence of cancer, which thus usually requires further follow-up CT scans. Improvement in work-up of indeterminate lung nodules is urgently needed, in particular with the expected introduction of lung cancer screening in the coming years.
In this study, the aim is to derive optimal imaging procedures and to assess the technical performance of the Vision Quadra PET/CT system concerning its feasibility to detect indeterminate lung nodules. Furthermore, this study aims to preliminary explore the sensitivity, specificity, and accuracy of the characterisation of lung nodules using the Vision Quadra PET/CT.
After enrolment, patients will receive a Standard 3 MBq/kg injection of 18F-FDG and undergo whole-body dynamic PET/CT acquisition at 30-60 min post-injection (pi), followed by a 10 min whole-body list-mode PET/CT acquisition. Subsequently, patients will be asked to hold their breath for 15 seconds to assess the added value of a single fast deep-inspiration breath-hold acquisition.
At 120 min pi a second 10 min whole-body list-mode PET/CT will be acquired to potentially further differentiate between inflammation and malignancy.
The list-mode acquisitions can be reprocessed retrospectively with less counts to produce images representing scans collected with lower activity administration or shorter scan times (e.g., a 1 min instead of 10 min PET scan is equivalent to 10% of the injected activity at scan start). Quantitative image analysis results will be correlated with pathology (benign or malignant) of the lung lesion, and results of a previously performed routine-care 18F-FDG PET/CT and CT chest.
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Joyce van Sluis, MSc.; Adrienne H Brouwers, MD PhD
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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