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FDG-PET/CT predicts melanoma patients’ response to immune checkpoint inhibitor therapy

Press releases may be edited for formatting or style | September 05, 2017 Molecular Imaging Rad Oncology PET
RESTON, Va. – Advanced melanoma, a type of skin cancer that has spread to other areas of the body, has a poor prognosis, but immune checkpoint inhibitor therapy can be effective for some patients. Research highlighted in the featured article of the September issue of The Journal of Nuclear Medicine demonstrates that combined positron emission tomography/computed tomography (PET/CT) scanning early in treatment could identify whether the therapy will benefit a particular patient. As the therapy has potentially serious side-effects, early determination of ineffectiveness could avert unnecessary risk exposure and provide the option of a different treatment.

Immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICI) block certain proteins made by immune system cells, such as T cells, and some cancer cells that were keeping the immune system’s T cells from killing the cancer cells. When these checkpoint proteins are blocked by inhibitors, the immune system can function again and T cells are better able to destroy cancer cells.

Determining response to ICI therapy has been challenging. “Current anatomic CT-based response criteria are typically performed at the earliest two to four months into treatment and are limited in their ability to assess stable disease and pseudoprogression,” explains Steve Y. Cho, MD, one of the lead authors of this prospective study funded by the Melanoma Research Alliance and conducted at Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland, with Richard L Wahl, MD and in close collaboration with melanoma specialists Evan Lipson, MD, and Suzanne Topalian, MD. Hyung Jun Im, MD, is also a major contributor to this study with Cho, who is now at the University of Wisconsin School of Medicine and Public Health, Madison, Wisconsin.
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The study evaluated the use of 18F-fluorodeoxyglucose-(FDG)-PET/CT scanning as an early predictor of response to ICI therapy in 20 patients with advanced melanoma. The patients each had three scans: prior to treatment, at 21 to 28 days and at four months. The researchers developed criteria to predict eventual response to ICI with 100% sensitivity, 93% specificity and 95% accuracy.

Cho notes, “When 18F-FDG PET-based response criteria were combined with CT-based criteria, we were able to more accurately differentiate eventual clinical benefit. Based on our data, we have proposed a combined PET and CT-based response criteria to immune-checkpoint inhibitor therapy in advanced metastatic melanoma. Interestingly, we found a small increase in 18F-FDG tumor uptake at this early time point that may implicate an active immune mediated ‘flare’ as a good indication that the tumor is responsive to the immune therapy.”

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