Visceral hepatic leishmaniasis in a melanoma patient in FDG-PET

Author(s):  
Andreas Dunzinger ◽  
Carina Datinger ◽  
Almute Loidl ◽  
Bernhard Walcherberger ◽  
Roland Andreas Lengauer ◽  
...  

Background: Leishmaniasis is caused by protozoans that depend on female phlebotomine sandflies as vectors. The natural habitat of these sandflies is changing due to climate change. More patients will get immunocompromised due to cancer therapy. Case report: We report the case of a 72-year-old patient with melanoma in whom we found visceral leishmaniasis mimicking hepatic metastasis in routine FDG-PET/CT. The patient was hospitalized due to fever and pancytopenia in the general hospital Steyr. The diagnosis was made by biopsy of the iliac crest with cytological study and polymerase chain reaction. After treatment with amphotericin B, the patient recovered, and tests became negative, including FDG-PET/CT. Because of climate change and the increasing use of immunomodulatory medication, our awareness of such findings should grow. Conclusion: New pitfalls in diagnosis and surveillance of cancer patients because of altered environmental conditions and immunocompromised patients have to be considered.

2017 ◽  
Vol 47 (3) ◽  
pp. 363-367 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ömer Kasalak ◽  
Andor W. J. M. Glaudemans ◽  
Jelle Overbosch ◽  
Paul C. Jutte ◽  
Thomas C. Kwee

Blood ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 134 (Supplement_1) ◽  
pp. 2811-2811 ◽  
Author(s):  
Frederique St-Pierre ◽  
Stephen Broski ◽  
Betsy Laplant ◽  
Thomas M. Habermann ◽  
Thomas E. Witzig

Background: FDG PET/CT and bone marrow biopsy (BMB) are considered standard procedures for the staging of patients with new, untreated FL. A key issue in FL is the early identification of patients who will fail early. We recently reported (Am J Hematology 2019) that the presence of ≥2 EN sites, spleen, bone or soft tissue involvement as detected by PET all predicted failure to achieve EFS24. In Hodgkin lymphoma and diffuse large B-cell NHL, PET has replaced the routine need for a staging BMB. However, there is no such evidence in FL. The goal of this study was to determine the value of FDG PET/CT in determining bone involvement in FL using BMB as the gold standard. Methods: Patients were identified using the Mayo Clinic Lymphoma Database. 548 patients with newly diagnosed FL grades 1-3A between years 2003-2016, available BMB results, and PET/CT imaging at diagnosis, were included in the analysis. The presence of bone and spleen involvement on PET/CT, SUVmax and SUVmean of the axial skeleton at L3, and BMB results were recorded and compared. Results: In all, 36% (197/548) of patients had a positive BMB, and 34% (189/548) had bone involvement detected on PET/CT. Compared to BMB, the sensitivity and specificity of PET/CT in detecting bone involvement as determined by BMB were 60% and 80%, respectively. We noted that 59 patients had focal bone involvement on PET/CT rather than a diffuse component, and found that 47% (28/59) of these patients had a negative BMB obtained in the posterior iliac crest. Excluding these patients, the sensitivity and specificity of PET/CT in detecting bone involvement were 53% and 88%, respectively (Table 1). With respect to the spleen, 29% (157/548) of patients had evidence of splenic FL involvement on PET/CT, and of these, 69% (109/157) also had a positive BMB. The sensitivity and specificity of spleen involvement on PET/CT in predicting bone involvement on BMB were 55% and 86%, respectively (Table 2). We recorded SUV data at L3 in the 439 patients who had either a diffuse pattern of bone involvement on PET/CT, or a PET/CT read as negative. We analyzed the positive and negative predictive values (PPV and NPV) of SUVmax and SUVmean at several cut-off points to determine whether axial bone SUV is reliable at determining patients with a positive or negative BMB. The NPV for an SUVmax of less than 2.0 was 96% (n=25 patients classified as negative). For SUVmean, the best cut-off point was at less than 1.4, where NPV was 100% (n=15 patients classified as negative). There was no logical cut-off point for a significant PPV > 95%. Conclusion: In newly diagnosed FL, the sensitivity and specificity of bone involvement on PET/CT are insufficient for PET/CT to routinely replace BMB. However, in patients where the need for BMB at staging is being debated, certain factors on PET/CT can help facilitate this decision. The detection of focal bone lesions, especially those that may be missed on posterior iliac crest BMB, can make BMB unnecessary. If both the spleen and bone appear involved on PET/CT, this confers a relatively high chance that BMB will be positive. If SUVmax at L3 is less than 2.0, or if SUVmean is less than 1.4, the BMB will likely be negative, with a NPV > 95%. This decision-making algorithm is outlined in Figure 1 and may serve as a useful guideline for clinical trials and routine practice. Disclosures No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


Blood ◽  
2011 ◽  
Vol 118 (21) ◽  
pp. 2661-2661
Author(s):  
Hyo Jung Kim ◽  
Boram Han ◽  
Dok Hyun Yoon ◽  
Ho Young Kim ◽  
Shin Kim ◽  
...  

Abstract Abstract 2661 Background. In lymphoma, bone marrow (BM) involvement is a sign of extensive disease and BM biopsy is a standard method in the evaluation of BM infiltration by disease. Because of patchy BM involvement pattern by lymphoma, the reported rates of unilateral involvement in bilateral biopsies range from 10% to 50%. However BM biopsy is an invasive and painful procedure. The value of unilateral versus bilateral BM biopsy remains controversial. Fluorodeoxyglucose positron emission tomography-computed tomography (FDG PET-CT) is a noninvasive imaging technique and currently it shows potential to detect BM involvement by lymphoma. Aims. We assess the abilities of FDG PET-CT to ascertain the presence of BM involvement in diffuse large B cell lymphoma (DLBCL) patients and to define the possibility that bilateral BM biopsies could be replaced by unilateral biopsy for DLBCL staging workup. Methods. We retrospectively reviewed medical records of histologically proven DLBCL patients from 2004 through 2010 at the Asan Medical Center and Hallym University Medical Center. All patients were examined by FDG PET-CT and bilateral BM biopsy at both posterior iliac crests for initial staging workup. Evaluation of PET studies was performed by board-certified nuclear medicine physicians of each institution. Quantitative analysis of FDG uptake was not performed. Data were expressed in terms of sensitivity, specificity, positive predictive value (PPV) and negative predictive value (NPV) for FDG PET-CT in evaluation of BM involvement by DLBCL, using BM biopsy as the reference standard. Two sets (right & left biopsy site) of pathologic and imaging data were analyzed separately. Results. Study population comprised 478 patients (median age 57, range 17–85 years; 269 male) with newly diagnosed DLBCL. Ann Arbor stage I, II, III and IV patients were 96, 120, 40 and 222, respectively. Overall, BM involvement by DLBCL that confirmed by bilateral BM biopsy occurred in 63 patients (13.2%, 15, 12, and 36 at right, left and both side biopsy, respectively). From the data of right side biopsy and FDG PET-CT images, comparison of the former and the later results revealed concordant positive findings in 22 cases (4.6%) and concordant negative findings in another 418 cases (87.4%). In 29 patients (6.1%) in whom FDG PET-CT returned findings of normal marrow, iliac crest BM biopsy revealed lymphomatous infiltration. On the other hand, in 9 patients (1.9%) in whom bilateral iliac crest BM biopsy had failed to reveal any abnormality, FDG PET-CT showed increased uptake. The calculated values for FDG PET-CT in evaluation of right BM infiltration were 43.1% (22/51) of sensitivity, 97.9% (418/427) of specificity, 71% (22/31) of PPV and 93.5% (418/447) of NPV. The values oriented from left BM biopsy and FDG PET-CT images were similar (sensitivity 41.7% (20/48), specificity 97.9% (421/430), PPV 69% (20/29), NPV 93.7% (421/449)). Conclusions. This study has the largest DLBCL cases among ever reported articles, and demonstrates not excellent sensitivity of FDG PET-CT against the results of BM biopsy for the detection of BM involvement in DLBCL patients. BM biopsy could not be completely replaced with FDG PET-CT. But it has relatively good PPV, FDG PET-CT will be a useful tool for image-guided biopsy for DLBCL staging. And in daily practice, clinicians could consider the possibility to do efficient unilateral BM biopsy for DLBCL patients who have increased posterior iliac crest FDG uptake, instead of bilateral biopsy. Disclosures: Kim: Novartis: Research Funding.


Blood ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 134 (Supplement_1) ◽  
pp. 4394-4394 ◽  
Author(s):  
Amrita Y. Krishnan ◽  
Vikram Adhikarla ◽  
Ammar Chaudhry ◽  
Joycelynne Palmer ◽  
Erasmus K Poku ◽  
...  

Introduction: 18Fluoro-deoxyglucose (FDG) positron emission tomography/computed tomography (PET/CT) is one of the most widely used imaging techniques to detect multiple myeloma (MM). Intracellular FDG uptake depicts in vivo metabolic activity, which can be seen in both malignant and non-malignant cells, resulting in limited sensitivity and specificity. Our group showed preclinically that tracing MM dissemination using a CD38-directed human antibody, daratumumab, that is radioconjugated with copper-64 via the chelator DOTA (64Cu-DOTA-Dara), led to improved sensitivity and specificity over that of FDG (Caserta et al, Blood 2018). Herein, we report the results of a Phase 1 trial (NCT#03311828) designed to 1) assess the safety and feasibility of 64Cu-DOTA-Dara PET/CT and 2) to evaluate and characterize the ability of 64Cu-DOTA-Dara to accurately detect or exclude MM lesions compared with FDG PET/CT. Methods: Patients with biopsy-proven MM and/or a plasmacytoma received an FDG PET/CT scan within 60 days of enrollment. On Day 0, patients were infused with unlabeled ("cold") Dara at one of four dose levels (0 mg, 10 mg, 45 mg, 95 mg) to optimize biodistribution of radioconjugated 64Cu-DOTA-Dara, especially in the liver and the spleen. Within 6 hours of unlabeled Dara administration, patients received 64Cu-DOTA-Dara at a dose of 13.63-16.68 mCi (~5 mg). Whole-body PET scans were obtained at 24 hours and at 48 hours (the latter scan encompassing known tumors). 64Cu-DOTA-Dara standardized uptake values (SUV) were evaluated in MM lesions and normal organs, which were then compared with values from standard FDG PET/CT. Biopsies were performed on accessible discordant lesions. Results: A total of 10 Dara-naïve patients were imaged. Patients were treated with 0 (n=3), 10 (n=3), 45 (n=3), or 95 mg (n=1) of unlabeled Dara. Four patients had newly diagnosed disease, one had biochemical relapse, one had a recurrent plasmacytoma by MRI, and four had possible recurrence by standard PET/CT. No significant adverse events were observed from either cold or 64Cu-DOTA-Dara. With the exception of the one patient with a recurrent plasmacytoma, radiolabeled antibody was eliminated from systemic circulation in subjects analyzed at the first three dose levels within 30 min post injection. In the patient with a recurrent plasmacytoma, the radiolabeled antibody was elevated in the blood for over two days. One newly diagnosed patient had extensive disease by FDG PET and had a biopsy-proven target lesion in the sternum, which had an SUVmax of 14.7 on 64Cu-DOTA-Dara PET/CT vs. 3.3 onFDG PET/CT. A second biopsy from the same patient was taken from a discordant iliac crest lesion (positive for 64Cu-DOTA-Dara but negative for FDG PET/CT) that showed 20-30% MM cell infiltration. In another patient, an iliac crest lesion was 64Cu-DOTA-Dara positive and FDG-negative; biopsy revealed 6% plasmacytosis in the bone. A third patient had an FDG PET/CT positive pleural lesion with an SUVmax of 8.98 and negative on 64Cu-DOTA-Dara (Figure 1A). The lesion did not show recurrence upon biopsy. Furthermore, 64Cu-DOTA-Dara PET/CT yielded superior imaging of bone lesions in the calvarium (Figure 1B). Escalating doses of unlabeled Dara decreased liver and spleen uptake by 64Cu-DOTA-Dara. Conclusions: In this ongoing study, 64Cu-DOTA-Dara PET/CT imaging is to date safe and provides whole body imaging of MM. Further dose escalation of cold Dara (145 mg, 195 mg) is planned to optimize background interference. This modality has the potential to improve sensitivity and specificity over FDG PET/CT scanning in early-stage MM as well as in recurrent disease. Disclosures Krishnan: Celgene, Janssen, Sanofi, BMS: Consultancy; Sutro BioPharma, zPredicta: Consultancy; Amgen, Takeda: Speakers Bureau; Celgene, Z Predicta: Other: Stock Ownership; Takeda: Research Funding. Palmer:Gilead Sciences: Consultancy. Rosenzweig:Celgene, Takeda: Speakers Bureau. Wu:ImaginAb, Inc.: Consultancy, Other: Board Member.


Pneumologie ◽  
2009 ◽  
Vol 63 (S 01) ◽  
Author(s):  
S Krüger ◽  
S Maschke ◽  
H Kley ◽  
T Merk ◽  
T Wibmer ◽  
...  
Keyword(s):  
Fdg Pet ◽  
Pet Ct ◽  
18F Fdg ◽  

Pneumologie ◽  
2009 ◽  
Vol 63 (S 01) ◽  
Author(s):  
S Krüger ◽  
S Maschke ◽  
H Kley ◽  
T Merk ◽  
T Wibmer ◽  
...  
Keyword(s):  
Fdg Pet ◽  
Pet Ct ◽  
18F Fdg ◽  

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