Assessing tumor hypoxia in cervical cancer by PET with 60Cu-labeled diacetyl-bis(N4-methylthiosemicarbazone). Academic Article uri icon

Overview

abstract

  • Tumor hypoxia indicates a poor prognosis. This study was undertaken to confirm our prior pilot results showing that pretreatment tumor hypoxia demonstrated by PET with (60)Cu-labeled diacetyl-bis(N(4)-methylthiosemicarbazone) ((60)Cu-ATSM) is a biomarker of poor prognosis in patients with cervical cancer. Thirty-eight women with biopsy-proved cervical cancer underwent (60)Cu-ATSM PET before the initiation of radiotherapy and chemotherapy. (60)Cu-ATSM uptake was evaluated semiquantitatively as the tumor-to-muscle activity ratio (T/M). A log-rank test was used to determine the cutoff uptake value that was strongly predictive of prognosis. All patients also underwent clinical PET with (18)F-FDG before the institution of therapy. The PET results were correlated with clinical follow-up. Tumor (60)Cu-ATSM uptake was inversely related to progression-free survival and cause-specific survival (P = 0.006 and P = 0.04, respectively, as determined by the log-rank test). We found that a T/M threshold of 3.5 best discriminated patients likely to develop a recurrence from those unlikely to develop a recurrence; the 3-y progression-free survival of patients with normoxic tumors (as defined by T/M of < or = 3.5) was 71%, and that of patients with hypoxic tumors (T/M of > 3.5) was 28% (P = 0.01). Tumor (18)F-FDG uptake did not correlate with (60)Cu-ATSM uptake, and there was no significant difference in tumor (18)F-FDG uptake between patients with hypoxic tumors and those with normoxic tumors (P = 0.9). Pretherapy (60)Cu-ATSM PET provides clinically relevant information about tumor oxygenation that is predictive of outcome in patients with cervical cancer.

publication date

  • January 16, 2008

Research

keywords

  • Organometallic Compounds
  • Oxygen
  • Positron-Emission Tomography
  • Thiosemicarbazones
  • Uterine Cervical Neoplasms

Identity

Scopus Document Identifier

  • 38949098088

Digital Object Identifier (DOI)

  • 10.2967/jnumed.107.048520

PubMed ID

  • 18199612

Additional Document Info

volume

  • 49

issue

  • 2