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Early [18F]-FDG PET Dynamic Analysis in Brain Metastases After Radiotherapy.
Sponsor: Centre Hospitalier Universitaire, Amiens
Summary
Various treatment options are available for brain metastases, depending on factors such as lesion site or number lesions. Radiotherapy is a commonly used treatment. Following stereotactic radiotherapy for brain metastases, a potential complication, namely brain radionecrosis, can occur subsequently. It is essential to differentiate between this radionecrosis and lesion recurrence in order to determine the appropriate treatment approach. Contrast-enhanced magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) is the most widely used technique for monitoring brain metastases. Therefore, patients undergo routine MRI at 3 months and during subsequent follow-ups, but if the lesion evolve and if distinguishing between recurrence and radionecrosis is challenging, an \[18F\]-FDG PET scan is then prescribed by oncologists or radiotherapists during follow-up consultations. As part of the standard patient management protocol, a 10-minute image acquisition begins after a 45-60 minutes wait following the radiotracer injection. A second image acquisition is then conducted 3-4 hours later. For both acquisitions, a low-dose X-ray scanner is synchronously coupled to allow attenuation correction of the PET images. Patient for whom a \[18F\]-FDG PET cerebral examination has been prescribed as part of the usual management of brain metastases will be eligible to the protocol. If the patient agrees to participate, an early imaging session is initiated immediately upon radiotracer injection, lasting 15 minutes in addition to the standard acquisition protocol.
Official title: Interest of Early Dynamic Analysis of [18F]-FDG PET Images in the Differential Diagnosis Between Recurrence and Radionecrosis in Brain Metastases.
Key Details
Gender
All
Age Range
18 Years - Any
Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Enrollment
50
Start Date
2026-05-18
Completion Date
2028-11-18
Last Updated
2026-06-08
Healthy Volunteers
No
Interventions
CT scan
The patient is installed in the PET camera as soon as he is injected, so that early fixation of the \[18F\]-FDG radiotracer can be recorded for 15 minutes. As part of this acquisition, a CT scan dedicated for attenuation correction is also performed. Both this scan and the late scan will be carried out at ultra--low dose so that the total dose received by the patient does not exceed what he would have received without this research. The patient's total examination time remains unchanged
Locations (1)
CHRU Amiens
Amiens, France