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Carol-Anne Davis, RT(T), AC(T), DHSA, MSc May 28 – 30, 2015, Montréal, Québec I do not have an affiliation, financial or otherwise, with a pharmaceutical company, medical device or communications organization. I have no conflicts of interest to disclose ( i.e. no industry funding received or other commercial relationships). I have no financial relationship or advisory role with pharmaceutical or device-making companies, or CME provider. I will not discuss or describe in my presentation at the meeting the investigational or unlabeled ("off-label") use of a medical device, product, or pharmaceutical that is classified by Health Canada as investigational for the intended use. May 28 – 30, 2015, Montréal, Québec PET-CT “Over the past 20 years, positron emission tomography (PET) and PET/CT (computed tomography) have revolutionized the care of cancer patients in developed countries and are increasingly being adopted in emerging economies. PET has been, and still is, one of the fastest growing fields in medical imaging”* *Permission granted from International Atomic Energy Agency: International Atomic Energy Agency, Standard Operating Procedures for PET/CT: A Practical Approach for Use in Adult Oncology IAEA Human Health Series 26, IAEA, Vienna (2013). Research Question What proportion of non-small cell carcinoma lung and head & neck squamous cell carcinoma patients have a significantly different CTV due to the use of PET-CT? Target Volumes: GTV, CTV high, low Extent of gross tumour, i.e. what can be seen, palpated or imaged; this is known as the gross tumour volume (GTV). Developments in imaging have contributed to the definition of the GTV. Target Volumes: GTV, CTV high, low The second volume contains the GTV + a margin for sub-clinical disease spread which therefore cannot be fully imaged; this is known as the clinical target volume (CTV). It is the most difficult because it cannot be accurately defined for an individual patient, but future developments in imaging, especially towards the molecular level, should allow more specific delineation of the CTV. The CTV is important because this volume must be adequately treated to achieve cure. Target Volumes: GTV, CTV Target Volumes: GTV, CTV high, low GTV primary CTV low risk (requires lower dose) GTV nodes CTV high risk (requires max dose) courtesy of G Segall (Stanford University) through the PET PROS program of the SNM PET Center of Excellence“. http://www.snm.org/index.cfm?PageID=10044 PET-CT is a powerful diagnostic imaging tool that combines anatomic imaging (CT) with physiologic data (PET) PET-CT is sensitive and specific for cancer PET Stands for positron emission tomography Fluorine-18-deoxyglucose (18-FDG), a radionuclide labeled glucose analogue, is injected and the pt is imaged 18F-fluorodeoxyglucose (FDG) is taken up by cells proportionate to their metabolic rates Quite simply… Malignant cells take inherently have a higher metabolism than non-malignant cells. They have a higher mitotic rate as well as more inefficient aerobic metabolism leading to more anaerobic metabolism Through these mechanisms, malignant cells will take up the FDG at a faster rate and this will can be seen on the scan as the FDG decays. Imaging Protocol Patient - Fast 5 hrs prior to exam - Inject tracer - Start scan 60 min later CT - Topogram (scout) - CT scan (1 min) PET - Brain (10 min) - Heart (10 min) - Body (20 min) <130 PET/CT in oncology PET-CT allows the clinician to better differentiate benign vs malignant structural abnormalities seen on CT as well as see possible malignancies where no structural abnormalities are seen. •Detect radiographically occult lesions •Evaluate extent of disease •Characterize radiographic abnormalities •Evaluate response to therapy Abnormal PET - CT Body Scan courtesy of G Segall (Stanford University) through the PET PROS program of the SNM PET Center of Excellence“. http://www.snm.org/index.cfm?PageID=10044 Lesion Characterization courtesy of G Segall (Stanford University) through the PET PROS program of the SNM PET Center of Excellence“. http://www.snm.org/index.cfm?PageID=10044 Lesion Characterization courtesy of G Segall (Stanford University) through the PET PROS program of the SNM PET Center of Excellence“. http://www.snm.org/index.cfm?PageID=10044 Enhanced Detection Enhanced Detection courtesy of G Segall (Stanford University) through the PET PROS program of the SNM PET Center of Excellence“. http://www.snm.org/index.cfm?PageID=10044 Background and Rationale of Research Study What do we “know” about PET-CT with respect to RT? PET-CT with FDG (18F-fluorodeoxyglucose) impacts: • Target volume delineation (improves visualisation of tumour extent and nodal involvement) • Dose • Treatment intent & staging. *Alters management in 30%-70% of patients • PET-CT is in high demand (approx 40 pts/week and is funded for 1500 NS cases per year; 2000 including OOP) Study Objectives PRIMARY STUDY OBJECTIVE: To estimate the proportion of high-risk volumes contoured that are impacted by the use of PET-CT. SECONDARY OUTCOMES: A. To investigate the dosimetric impact of PET-CT: estimate the proportion of CT-alone CTV volumes that differed from the PET-CT CTV volumes measure and estimate changes in dose to critical structures between PET-CT and CT-alone plans estimate the proportion of treatment intent changes B. To investigate the relationship between the Concordance Index (CI) and the approved/rejected status of RT treatment plans. SCC Tonsil pre PET-CT: T3N2bM0 (CTV-CT in blue = 118.30 cm3) Test tx plan generated to meet QA constraints (target volume and OARs) Post PET-CT: T3N2cM0 (CTV-PET blue + green =125.80 cm3; 6.33% increase) “rejected plan" status = PET-CT impact Data Analysis SAMPLE SIZE: 186 patients PRIMARY ANALYSIS: Compute a point estimate of the proportion of plans impacted by PET-CT with the associated 95% CI. A full CT-alone treatment plan (based on the CT-alone target volumes) is generated in the test database. This CT-alone Tx plan meets all QA constraints defined by the department. The CT-alone Tx plan is applied to the final PET-CT target volumes (ie: the actual volumes defined/used for Tx). If the CT-alone plan meets all QA parameters and dose constraints, the TEST plan is “accepted” and it is deemed that the PET-CT had no impact on the CTV volume delineated . If the CT-alone plan fails the QA parameters and dose constraints, the TEST plan is “rejected” and the PET-CT is deemed to have impacted the CTV volume delineated. Data Analysis SECONDARY ANALYSES: Change in size of CTV volume delineated: Compare CT-alone and PET-CTV volumes (measured in cubic centimetres) using a paired t-test, considering statistical significance at the alpha level of 0.05. Change in dose to critical structures: Compare doses (measured in centigray) from CT-alone plan and PET-CT plan using a paired t-test, considering statistical significance at the alpha level of 0.05. Relationship between CI and Plan status (approved or rejected): Binary partitioning will be used to determine what the critical cutpoint value of CI that optimally partitions the patients with respect to plan status. A B Concordance index = A∩B A∪B A∩B B A 300 cc 300 cc A A&B B 300 cc 300 cc 300 cc ? CI = 0 CI = 1 Geographic Miss PET-CT Impact Identical Volumes No PET-CT Impact Results…. Accrual and initial findings to date: Head and Neck Patient Characteristics: # of Pts Mean Age (years) 53 60.8 (range 45-80) Gender 45 male 8 female ECOG (Modal) 1 (range 0-3) Disease Site Oropharynx: 33 Oral cavity: 2 Larynx: 8 Nasopharynx: 5 Primary unknown: 5 Accrual and initial findings to date: NSCLC Patient Characteristics: # of Pts Mean Age (years) 36 68.2 (range 44-88) Gender 22 male 14 female ECOG (Modal) 2 (range 0-3) Pathology SCC: 21 Adenocarcinoma: 10 Not specified: 5 HNSCC n=49 n =46 test plan evaluated n= 3 test plan not evaluated n=3 study steps not followed n=1 CT-alone contours failed peer review n=28 no impact n= 18 impact n=2 change from radical to palliative n=1 change in dose (increase) n= 28 n=21 no impact (57.1%) impact (42.9%) n=4 not assessed NSCLC n=31 n =27 test plan evaluated n= 4 test plan not evaluated n=4 study steps not followed n=1 PET-CT deemed not useable by RO n=17 no impact n= 10 impact n=2 change from radical to palliative n=2 RT cancelled completely n= 17 n=14 no impact (54.8%) impact (45.2%) n=5 not assessed Volume Size Change: H&N CTV-CT (cm3) CTV-PET (cm3) % Change 149.84 160.42 +11.83 Minimum 17.64 17.64 n/a Maximum 624.98 619.58 n/a Max Increase n/a n/a +123.78 Max decrease n/a n/a -17.53 Mean 41.3% (n=19) no change, 50% (n=23) increased CTVs; 8.7% (n=4) decreased CTVs Mean absolute difference =10.58 cm3 with 95% CI (5.02, 16.13) (p<0.01) Mean relative volume change = 11.83% with 95% CI (4.29, 19.35) (p<0.01) Volume Size Change: NSCLC CTV-CT (cm3) CTV-PET (cm3) % Change 159.35 166.78 +3.08 Minimum 3.32 3.80 n/a Maximum 415.45 453.33 n/a Max Increase n/a n/a +43.44 Max decrease n/a n/a -37.33 Mean 11.1% (n=3) no change, 51.8% (n=14) increased CTV; 37.1% (n=10) decreased CTVs Mean absolute volume = 7.42 cm3 with 95% CI (-6.86, 27.72) (p=0.29) Mean relative volume = 3.08% with 95% CI (-4.24, 10.41) (p= 0.39) Organs-at-risk (OARs) For all OARs assessed, no statistically significant differences were noted with the exception of mean parotid dose. Mean parotid dose for the right and left parotids were significantly different (p<0.01 and p<0.03 respectively) although the dose differences were considered clinically insignificant. Conclusion Interim analysis of data found that the use of PET-CT in the RT planning process impacted CTV selection, resulting in a major change in RT plans in 44% of patients The CI may provide a means to predict the impact of PET-CT on CTV delineation. Continuation of study to full accrual: 186 patients. (*Final accrual of 189 patients was reached January 2014) Next steps Investigate the impact of PET-CT on outcomes: Overall survival Disease free survival Local control Distant metastases Investigate the ability of ‘size’ vs ‘spatial’ volume differences as means of predicting impact of a technology Case Studies T2 N2a M0 SCC LT Tonsil before PET: CTV70 (red): 93.53 cm3 New RT tonsil primary found: CTV70 after PET (blue): 101.70 cm3 (8.74% increase) T2N2bM0 SCC Lt Tonsil before PET: CTV70 (pink) = 93.29 cm3 T2N2bM0 after PET: CTV70 (pink & orange) 96.85 cm3 (3.81% increase) T3N0M0 SCC BoT before PET: CTV70 (blue) = 173.24 cm3 T4N2cM0 after PET: CTV70 (blue & red) = 210.47 cm3 (21.49% increase) NSCLC: Stage III before PET-CT CTV-CT (green) = 204.01 cm3 CTV-PET (blue) vol= 166.25 cm3; 18.51% decrease (PET-CT reduced V5 from 64.0% to 46.5% and V20 from 29.8% to 22.5 %) NSCLC: T1bN1M0 before PET-CT CTV-CT (green) = 32.84 cm3 CTV-PET (pink) vol= 25.78 cm3; 21.49% decrease Patient restaged to T1bN0M0 NSCLC: T2N0M0 before PET-CT CTV-CT (green) = 163.24 cm3 CTV-PET (pink) vol= 225.08 cm3; 37.9% increase Patient restaged to T2N1M0 NSCLC: before PET-CT CTV-CT (blue) = 217.28 cm3 CTV-PET (pink) vol= 174.63 cm3; 19.6% decrease References Gregoire V, Dainse JF, Bauvois C, et al. 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McNulty, S. radiology.med.sc.edu/presentations/Presentation%20Sam.ppt accessed on 2013.09.25 Acknowledgements Dr. Derek Wilke Prof. Mohamed Abdolell Dr. Chris Thomas Mr. Allan Day Dr. Helmut Hollenhorst Dr. Murali Rajaraman Dr. Liam Mulroy Dr. Dorianne Rheaume Dr. Slawa Cwajna Dr. Nikhilesh Patil Dr. David Bowes Dr. Steven Burrell