Preprint Article Version 1 Preserved in Portico This version is not peer-reviewed

First Live-Experience Session with PET/CT Specimen Imager. A pilot analysis in Prostate Cancer and Neuroendocrine Tumor

Version 1 : Received: 21 December 2022 / Approved: 23 December 2022 / Online: 23 December 2022 (04:25:01 CET)
Version 2 : Received: 31 January 2023 / Approved: 2 February 2023 / Online: 2 February 2023 (02:30:52 CET)

A peer-reviewed article of this Preprint also exists.

Muraglia, L.; Mattana, F.; Travaini, L.L.; Musi, G.; Bertani, E.; Renne, G.; Pisa, E.; Ferrari, M.E.; Fumagalli Romario, U.; De Cobelli, O.; Fusco, N.; Ceci, F. First Live-Experience Session with PET/CT Specimen Imager: A Pilot Analysis in Prostate Cancer and Neuroendocrine Tumor. Biomedicines 2023, 11, 645. Muraglia, L.; Mattana, F.; Travaini, L.L.; Musi, G.; Bertani, E.; Renne, G.; Pisa, E.; Ferrari, M.E.; Fumagalli Romario, U.; De Cobelli, O.; Fusco, N.; Ceci, F. First Live-Experience Session with PET/CT Specimen Imager: A Pilot Analysis in Prostate Cancer and Neuroendocrine Tumor. Biomedicines 2023, 11, 645.

Abstract

Objective: to evaluate the feasibility of the intra-operative application of a specimen PET/CT imager in a clinical setting. Materials and methods: this is a pilot analysis performed in three patients who received an intra-operative administration of 68Ga-PSMA-11 (n=2) and 68Ga-DOTA-TOC (n=1), respectively. Patients were administrated with PET radiopharmaceuticals to perform radio-guided surgery with a beta-probe detector during radical prostatectomy for prostate cancer (PCa) and salvage lymphadenectomy for recurrent neuroendocrine tumor (NET) of the ileum, respectively. All procedures have been performed within two ongoing clinical trials in our Institute (NCT05596851 and NCT05448157). Pathologic assessment with immunohistochemistry (PSMA-staining and SSA immunoreactivity) was considered as standard of truth. Specimen images were compared with baseline PET/CT images and histopathological analysis. Results: Patients received 1 MBq/Kg of 68Ga-PSMA-11 (PCa) or 1.2 MBq/Kg of 68Ga-DOTA-TOC (NET) prior to surgery. Specimens were collected, positioned in the dedicated specimen container, and scanned to obtain high resolution PET/CT images. In all cases a perfect match was observed between the findings detected by the specimen imager and histopathology. Overall, the PET spatial resolution was sensibly higher for the specimen images compared to the baseline whole-body PET/CT images. Furthermore, the use of the PET/CT specimen imager did not significantly interfere with any procedures, and the overall length of the surgery was not affected using the PET/CT specimen imager. Finally, the radiation exposure of the operating theater staff was lower than 40 µSv per procedure (range 26 – 40 Sv). Conclusion: the image acquisition of specimens obtained by patients who received intra-surgery injection of 68Ga-PSMA-11 and 68Ga-DOTA-TOC was feasible and reliable also in a live-experience session and has been easily adapted to surgery daily-practice. The high sensitivity, together with the evaluation of intra-lesion tumor heterogeneity, were the most relevant results since the data derived from specimen PET/CT imaging matched perfectly with the histopathological analysis.

Keywords

PET/CT; PET; PET/CT specimen imager; radio-guided surgery

Subject

Medicine and Pharmacology, Oncology and Oncogenics

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