Interactive Transcript
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Hello and welcome to Noon Conferences hosted by MRI Online.
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In response to the changes happening around the world right now and the
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shutting down of in person events, we have decided to provide free Noon
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Conferences for radiologists all around the world. Today we are joined for
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a noon conference by Dr. Elcin Zan. She is a radiologist who specializes
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in neuroradiology and nuclear medicine with a focus on theranostics, combining
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imaging and therapy. A reminder that there will be a Q&A session at
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the end of the lecture, so please use the Q&A feature to ask
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your questions and we will get to as many as we can before
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our time is up. That being said, thank you all for joining us
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today. Dr. Zan, I'll let you take it from here. Well, good afternoon, good
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morning or good evening, wherever you are. Thank you very much for joining
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us. I will be talking about molecular PET in head and neck oncology. Those
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are my disclosures but nothing relevant to the topic we will discuss here.
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We will talk about the major differences between molecular PET and radiology,
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and we will see the proven value of FDG PET in head and neck oncology and
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the pending value of DOTA TATE PET in head and neck oncology. Instead
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of providing you the sensitivity and specificity analyses from the literatures,
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I will be very practical and I will share you cases.
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All of them are my own cases from NYU,
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the institution that I work right now, because I want to show the
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real value of how practical the molecular PET could be in the real
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world, except the last case and we will see. So I'm going to
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stop my video so that we can all focus on the images. Let's
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start with the differences. What's the biggest difference between anatomic
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versus PET imaging? That's the basic question between radiology and molecular
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nuclear medicine practices. In radiology, as we can see here, we have an
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external source, whether it's a CT or MRI, and it is an organ based
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imaging, whether you scan the brain, head, or neck, or part of the
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body, it's organ based. So the biggest amount of data that you can
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collect is going to give you the information about the local,
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T, and nodal, and staging. As opposed to PET, it's an emission scan. We
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inject a small amount of, a minor amount of radiopharmaceutical, and then
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the body becomes the source of our signal, the body becomes the
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signal emitter, and the PET scanner collects the signal from the patient's
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body. That is a product of the inherent physiologic or pathologic states.
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So the difference is, again, anatomic, organ based,
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and it's a transmission scan, because we are an external source, as opposed
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to PET's molecular, it's a functional imaging, because we inject the patient,
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and then after a while, we image the patient as a whole,
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the entire body, to see the physiologic as well as the pathologic processes.
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And one of the fundamental differences aside from the techniques or technical
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equipment that we use is the PET tracers versus the gadolinium, because
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in CT or MRI, we use contrast, and mostly in... The example shown
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here is a blood vessel that shows how the contrast
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enhancement happens, as opposed to the PET, molecular PET, radiopharmaceuticals
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and the molecules at the top. So let's focus on
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the gadolinium first on MRs, which the same applies to the iodine. You
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do have either increased number of vessels within the
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mass or wherever the disease is, and this increased number of vessels are
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not healthy vessels. They are leaky, as you can see here,
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and they let either the iodine or the gadolinium to leak through the
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vessels, and that creates your enhancement and the recognition of the mass
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or lesions. And this is a very passive process. There is nothing specific
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to the type of the disease. Everything can enhance right. As opposed to
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the PET, it is as specific as we can get.
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The most commonly used radiopharmaceutical is FDG, as you can see.
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It's a GLUT transporter specific evaluation of the diseases, and the second
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most commonly clinically used tracer, we are talking about head and neck
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again, is DOTA TATE PET, and that is not specific but highly selective
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to somatostatin receptor type 2, and both are localized at the cell membrane.
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When a patient receives the radiopharmaceutical, as you can see here,
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after they are transferred into the interstitial space, their interaction
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with the disease states is through transporters or receptors, which is
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highly selective and more specific compared to gadolinium. It's not a passive
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evaluation of what is going on in the patient's body, but it's a more
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active evaluation of what functionally is going on in the patient's body.
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And once again, tracer uptake is not equal to enhancement. After that,
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this is the laundry list of PET tracers that we use,
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either for clinic or for research purposes, but I will show you the
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proven value of glucose analog, which is the FDG PET, more commonly known,
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as well as the DOTA TATE PET. That is a receptor,
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as you can see here, DOTA TATE peptide receptor imaging.
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I just want to put the name here so that we all
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become familiar. I think that is what the feature lies in
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some certain disease states, but not well proven for the head and neck yet.
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As much as FDG and all other imaging tracers that we have so
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far are focusing on the cells, specifically the cancer cells, this tracer,
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namely FAPI, the fibroblast activation protein inhibitor, is focusing on
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the tumor microenvironment. And now we know that
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tumor microenvironment is one of the major drivers of
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treatment response or developing treatment resistance to certain immunotherapy
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agents. So why do we care? Because why do we want to have
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more and more data? Wouldn't the head and neck CT or MR be enough
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for providing the patient the appropriate prognostic stage group, right?
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The only way we can acquire this complementary evaluation after primary
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and nodal disease evaluation by the CT or MRI is PET CT. We
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need PET CT.
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