Powerful posters on PET scans
A type of PET scan called FES-PET effectively picks up estrogen and can be used to measure tumor estrogen levels throughout the body to better predict response to endocrine (hormone) therapy.
Hutch/SCCA research docs Drs. Poorni Manohar, Hannah Linden and others analyzed two types of PET scans performed between 1996 and 2015 in women with metastatic lobular breast cancer.
Previously, they showed FES-PET can pick up lobular breast cancer, which is notoriously difficult to find with conventional imaging. This year, they looked at bone metastases and found both FES and another type of PET, called FDG, (which picks up glucose in tumor cells) lit up bones and bone marrow infiltrated by cancer.
But the FES scan lit up significantly more in patients with more bone marrow uptake. Those patients also had longer PFS (1.3 years versus 0.57 years).
“This challenges the conventional belief that bone marrow involvement is an aggressive feature and provides insight into the biology and spread of lobular breast cancer,” Manohar said.
The major takeaway, per the researchers: FES-PET is more promising than FDG-PET in the detection of metastatic lobular breast cancer, especially cancers with bone involvement. And it may be available in the U.S. in a matter of months.
"FES-PET has been approved and is available in Europe," Manohar said. "We are expecting it may be commercially available in the U.S. as soon as next summer."
Are FES-PET scans cost effective, though? And better than biopsy?
Using mathematical modeling and a hypothetical cohort of 60-year-old breast cancer survivors with suspected metastasis, Manohar, Linden and Hutchinson Institute for Cancer Outcomes Research colleague Dr. Josh Roth found FES-PET to be a “potentially high-value strategy” to identify patients who could benefit from estrogen therapy compared with biopsy, the standard for detecting mets and guiding choice of treatment.
“Our study found that FES-PET could be cost effective depending on the treatment selection,” Manohar said. "We have data showing that FES-PET in combination with FDG-PET could help determine low-risk patients, who could get endocrine therapy only; intermediate risk patients, who could receive endocrine therapy plus a CDK4/6 inhibitor; and high-risk patients, who need chemo.”
Overall, she said, FES-PET will help oncologists treat patients with the treatment they need: aggressive care only for those who require it and no unnecessary treatment for those who will do fine just with endocrine therapy.
“This type of risk stratification and personalized medicine is very much needed in metastatic breast cancer,” she said.
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