Integrated analysis of dynamic FET PET/CT parameters, histology, and methylation profiling of 44 gliomas

  • Manuel Röhrich
  • Kristin Huang
  • Daniel Schrimpf
  • Nathalie L Albert
  • Thomas Hielscher
  • Andreas von Deimling
  • Ulrich Schüller
  • Antonia Dimitrakopoulou-Strauss
  • Uwe Haberkorn

Abstract

PURPOSE: Dynamic 18F-FET PET/CT is a powerful tool for the diagnosis of gliomas.18F-FET PET time-activity curves (TAC) allow differentiation between histological low-grade gliomas (LGG) and high-grade gliomas (HGG). Molecular methods such as epigenetic profiling are of rising importance for glioma grading and subclassification. Here, we analysed dynamic 18F-FET PET data, and the histological and epigenetic features of 44 gliomas.

METHODS: Dynamic 18F-FET PET was performed in 44 patients with newly diagnosed, untreated glioma: 10 WHO grade II glioma, 13 WHO grade III glioma and 21 glioblastoma (GBM). All patients underwent stereotactic biopsy or tumour resection after 18F-FET PET imaging. As well as histological analysis of tissue samples, DNA was subjected to epigenetic analysis using the Illumina 850 K methylation array. TACs, standardized uptake values corrected for background uptake in healthy tissue (SUVmax/BG), time to peak (TTP) and kinetic modelling parameters were correlated with histological diagnoses and with epigenetic signatures. Multivariate analyses were performed to evaluate the diagnostic accuracy of 18F-FET PET in relation to the tumour groups identified by histological and methylation-based analysis.

RESULTS: Epigenetic profiling led to substantial tumour reclassification, with six grade II/III gliomas reclassified as GBM. Overlap of HGG-typical TACs and LGG-typical TACs was dramatically reduced when tumours were clustered on the basis of their methylation profile. SUVmax/BG values of GBM were higher than those of LGGs following both histological diagnosis and methylation-based diagnosis. The differences in TTP between GBMs and grade II/III gliomas were greater following methylation-based diagnosis than following histological diagnosis. Kinetic modeling showed that relative K1 and fractal dimension (FD) values significantly differed in histology- and methylation-based GBM and grade II/III glioma between those diagnosed histologically and those diagnosed by methylation analysis. Multivariate analysis revealed slightly greater diagnostic accuracy with methylation-based diagnosis. IDH-mutant gliomas and GBM subgroups tended to differ in their 18F-FET PET kinetics.

CONCLUSION: The status of dynamic 18F-FET PET as a biologically and clinically relevant imaging modality is confirmed in the context of molecular glioma diagnosis.

Bibliografische Daten

OriginalspracheEnglisch
ISSN1619-7070
DOIs
StatusVeröffentlicht - 07.2018
PubMed 29732524