TY - JOUR
T1 - Simulation of hypoxia PET-tracer uptake in tumours
T2 - Dependence of clinical uptake-values on transport parameters and arterial input function
AU - Paredes-Cisneros, Isabela
AU - Karger, Christian P.
AU - Caprile, Paola
AU - Nolte, David
AU - Espinoza, Ignacio
AU - Gago-Arias, Araceli
PY - 2020/2
Y1 - 2020/2
N2 - Poor radiotherapy outcome is in many cases related to hypoxia, due to the increased radioresistance of hypoxic tumour cells. Positron emission tomography may be used to non-invasively assess the oxygenation status of the tumour using hypoxia-specific radiotracers. Quantification and interpretation of these images remains challenging, since radiotracer binding and oxygen tension are not uniquely related. Computer simulation is a useful tool to improve the understanding of tracer dynamics and its relation to clinical uptake parameters currently used to quantify hypoxia. In this study, a model for simulating oxygen and radiotracer distribution in tumours was implemented to analyse the impact of physiological transport parameters and of the arterial input function (AIF) on: oxygenation histograms, time-activity curves, tracer binding and clinical uptake-values (tissue-to-blood ratio, TBR, and a composed hypoxia-perfusion metric, FHP). Results were obtained for parallel and orthogonal vessel architectures and for vascular fractions (VFs) of 1% and 3%. The most sensitive parameters were the AIF and the maximum binding rate (K-max). TBR allowed discriminating VF for different AIF, and FHP for different K-max, but neither TBR nor FHP were unbiased in all cases. Biases may especially occur in the comparison of TBR- or FHP-values between different tumours, where the relation between measured and actual AIF may vary. Thus, these parameters represent only surrogates rather than absolute measurements of hypoxia in tumours.
AB - Poor radiotherapy outcome is in many cases related to hypoxia, due to the increased radioresistance of hypoxic tumour cells. Positron emission tomography may be used to non-invasively assess the oxygenation status of the tumour using hypoxia-specific radiotracers. Quantification and interpretation of these images remains challenging, since radiotracer binding and oxygen tension are not uniquely related. Computer simulation is a useful tool to improve the understanding of tracer dynamics and its relation to clinical uptake parameters currently used to quantify hypoxia. In this study, a model for simulating oxygen and radiotracer distribution in tumours was implemented to analyse the impact of physiological transport parameters and of the arterial input function (AIF) on: oxygenation histograms, time-activity curves, tracer binding and clinical uptake-values (tissue-to-blood ratio, TBR, and a composed hypoxia-perfusion metric, FHP). Results were obtained for parallel and orthogonal vessel architectures and for vascular fractions (VFs) of 1% and 3%. The most sensitive parameters were the AIF and the maximum binding rate (K-max). TBR allowed discriminating VF for different AIF, and FHP for different K-max, but neither TBR nor FHP were unbiased in all cases. Biases may especially occur in the comparison of TBR- or FHP-values between different tumours, where the relation between measured and actual AIF may vary. Thus, these parameters represent only surrogates rather than absolute measurements of hypoxia in tumours.
KW - Hypoxia tracer uptake
KW - Positron-emission-tomography (PET)
KW - Radiotherapy
KW - Computer simulation
KW - SQUAMOUS-CELL CARCINOMA
KW - OXYGENATION
KW - HEAD
KW - MODEL
KW - FLUOROMISONIDAZOLE
KW - FMISO
KW - FAZA
U2 - 10.1016/j.ejmp.2020.01.012
DO - 10.1016/j.ejmp.2020.01.012
M3 - Article
SN - 1120-1797
VL - 70
SP - 109
EP - 117
JO - Physica medica-European journal of medical physics
JF - Physica medica-European journal of medical physics
ER -