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Researchers from the German Cancer Research Center in Heidelberg have reported that two new radiotracers achieved substantially shorter image acquisition times than FDG-PET scans and required no fasting or dietary changes. This may give a timely boost to cancer detection, they say (J. Nucl. Med. 10.2967/jnumed.118.215913).
The radiotracers are based on gallium-68 (Ga-68) and act as a fibroblast activation protein inhibitor (FAPI). They are considered a new class of radiopharmaceutical, designed to target cancer-associated fibroblasts, which promote tumour growth, migration and progression. In fact, fibroblast activation proteins are present in more than 90% of epithelial carcinomas — including breast, lung, colon, pancreatic and head-and-neck cancers — making them a viable option for both diagnostic imaging and therapy.
“Having an additional diagnostic tool opens up a new door for cancer patients,” added study co-author Uwe Haberkorn, professor of nuclear medicine at the University Hospital Heidelberg and the German Cancer Research Center in Heidelberg, in a statement. “For those who are facing unmet diagnostic challenges — unclear tumour segmentation for radiation therapy, suspicion of false-negative findings, or selection of last-line experimental treatment — Ga-68 FAPI may help to provide answers.”
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In this study, the researchers used Ga-68 FAPI in scans of 50 patients who appeared to have an abundance of fibroblast activation proteins and whose conditions could not be definitively diagnosed through conventional means. Preliminary dosimetry estimates for Ga-68 FAPI-2 and Ga-68 FAPI-4 were based on two patients who were examined 10 minutes, one hour, and three hours after tracer injection. PET/CT scans (Biograph mCT Flow, Siemens Healthineers) of tumour patients were acquired one hour after injection, with 25 subjects given Ga-68 FAPI-2 and the other 25 administered Ga-68 FAPI-4.
The tracers provided high-contrast images with quality equal to or better than that of the standard FDG-PET/CT imaging, without the need for patients to undergo any dietary restrictions or a fasting regimen before the scans. All of the patients tolerated the examination well, with no reports of any adverse symptoms or reactions.
The researchers also reported a fast clearance through the kidneys; normal organs showed low tracer uptake with only minimal changes between 10 minutes and three hours after injection. With Ga-68 FAPI-2, tumour uptake decreased by 75% from one to three hours after injection, while tumour retention was prolonged with Ga-68 FAPI-4 (25% washout). Faster tracer kinetics also made it “appropriate for imaging patients even less than one hour after injection,” the team wrote.
“A shorter waiting time and shorter scan time can increase patient comfort, which can be especially important for sick patients,” Haberkorn added. “The possibility of early imaging — for example, after only 10 minutes instead of an hour — could also play a part in simplifying clinical workflow.”
Given these preliminary findings, the researchers are hopeful FAPI PET imaging someday may be used to assess and manage cardiac diseases or fibrotic diseases of the lung, liver and kidneys.
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