Joint Program in Nuclear Medicine
Somatostatin Receptor Imaging in Oncology
Richard C. Hom, MD, PhD
Annick Van den Abbeele, MD
November 1, 1994
Presentation
A 69 year old man presented with a history of a persistent cough
progressing to dyspnea and unresponsive to antibiotic therapy.
A chest X-ray was performed and a 5 cm left hilar lung mass was
found. Bronchoscopic biopsy of the lesion revealed a small cell
lung carcinoma. Bone scintigraphy demonstrated increased
tracer accumulation in the left anterolateral second rib. Correlation
radiographs of the abnormality were nondiagnostic. The patient
was treated with ICE-T (Ifosfamide, Carboplatin, Etoposide, and
Taxol) for 4 cycles. The patient was further evaluated with a
CT scan and an octreoscan.
Imaging Technique
The bone scan was performed using a Siemens Bodyscan equipped
with a low energy all purpose collimator following the injection
of 24.2 mCi of 99mTc-labeled MDP. Static (600K to 1.5M counts/image)
and whole body images (2M counts) were obtained using a matrix
size of 128 x 128. Indium-111-Octreoscan planar and SPECT images
were obtained at 4, 24, and 48 hours following the injection of
6.3mCi of Octreoscan and were acquired using a Siemens MS-2 MultiSpect
dual head camera equipped with medium energy collimators for 64
views (2 x 32), 180o, 50 sec/image with a matrix size of 64 x
64. A Butterworth filter was used in the reconstruction of the
raw data using a cut-off of 0.6 and an order of 7.
Imaging Findings
Bone scintigraphy (27k bytes) demonstrated increased tracer
accumulation in the left anterolateral second rib.
The CT scan (36k bytes) of the patient's chest obtained following
therapy demonstrated a marked reduction in the left hilar and
subcarinal mass which is almost gone. Because the patient's
management depended on whether or not the lesion seen on the bone
scan was malignant, an octreotide scan (41k bytes) was performed.
No abnormal tracer accumulation was seen in the region of the
bone scan abnormality seen on bone scintigraphy. There were,
however, two foci of increased uptake in the left hilum. The
patient was then started on a course of radiotherapy to the left
hilum.
Discussion
Somatostatin
Somatostatin is a 14-amino-acid peptide hormone found on many
cells of neuroendocrine origin. It acts as a neurotransmitter
in the central nervous system. Hormonally, when it binds to cells,
it inhibits the release of growth hormone, insulin, glucagon,
and gastrin. Somatostatin receptors have been demonstrated on
the surface of human tumor cells which includes the cells with
amine precursor uptake and decarboxylation (APUD) properties such
as pituitary tumors, endocrine pancreatic tumors, carcinoids,
paragangliomas, small cell lung cancers, medullary thyroid carcinomas
and pheochromocytomas. Other non-APUD cells may also bear somatostatin
receptors, such as activated lymphocytes, astrocytomas, and some
breast carcinoma. Studies have shown that somatostatin analogs
may inhibit growth of many of these tumors in vivo in animal studies.
Somatostatin Analogs
Analogs of somatostatin were developed because human somatostatin
has a very short half-life in circulation (2-3 minutes) and is
easily broken down by endogenous peptidases (Rens-Domiano and
Reisine, 1992). The analogs preserved two important molecular
features of somatostatin: its cyclic form and the 4 amino acids
involved in the binding to the receptor. One somatostatin analog
that has been studied in vitro and in vivo extensively is octreotide
(SandostatinTM). It has been used as hormonal treatment in patients
with carcinoid syndrome.
I-123 Labelled Octreotide Derivative
In vivo studies with the radioiodinated derivative of octreotide
have demonstrated the visualization of somatostatin receptor-positive
tumors within minutes after the administration of the tracer.
The substitution of D-amino acids and alcohol derivatization
decreased the degree of enzymatic degradation resulting in a prolonged
half-life (approximately 120 minutes). The presence of somatostatin
receptors on tumors was found to be predictive of the ability
of octreotide to suppress hormonal secretion (Lamberts et al,
1993). It has been used to detect and localize carcinoid, islet
cell tumors (Kvols et al, 1993) and small-cell lung cancer (Leitha
et al, 1993; Krenning et al, 1993). This compound has not, however,
been used extensively because:
- the expense of I-123 and its unavailability in certain regions
of the world
- the time consuming preparation requiring more expertise than
most facilities have
- the short physical half life of I-123 rendering delayed images
difficult to obtain with adequate counts
- the extensive biliary tract excretion of the tracer into the
bowel making evaluation of intra-abdominal tumors difficult.
In-111 Labelled Octreotide Derivative
To avoid these problems, [In-111-DTPA-D-Phe1]-octreotide was prepared
(Bakker, 1991). It was found to have a high affinity for somatostatin
receptors and similar biological properties as octreotide. The
compound, also called OctreoScan, is easily labeled with In-111.
Since this radiotracer is mainly eliminated via the kidneys,
intra-abdominal evaluation of somatostatin-receptor positive tumors
could be performed.
The normal distribution of the tracer are:
- the kidneys and bladder (the route of excretion)
- the liver (diffuse low uptake)
- the spleen (marked uptake)
- the pituitary gland (modest)
- thyroid gland (modest)
- occasionally the large bowel at 24 hours.
Comparision of I-123 and In-111 labeled Octreotide Derivatives
One small series involving 6 patients (small-cell lung cancer,
gastrinoma, insulinoma, carcinoid and pheochromocytoma) had a
head to head comparison of I-123-Tyr3-octreotide and [In-111-DTPA-D-Phe1]
octreotide scans and demonstrated a more rapid clearance of the
former (Krenning, et al, 1992). However, the iodine-labeled compound
had a higher background because of degradation products and a
higher intestinal background because of biliary excretion. There
appeared to be an overall higher sensitivity of the indium-labeled
compound in this small series. Insufficient data were provided
to compute sensitivity, specificity or accuracy.
Tumor Imaging
Krenning et al (1993) at Rotterdam have published the results
of scintigraphy using [In-111-DTPA-D-Phe1]- and [I-123-Tyr3]-octreotide
in over 1000 patients with various neuroendocrine tumors and non-neuroendocrine
tumors such as brain tumors, breast cancer, non-small cell lung
cancers, lymphomas and adenocarcinomas of unknown origin. This
was a multicenter study. Some of the data obtained are provided
in the table below. The scintigraphy and in vitro studies were
not done on the same patients and the number of patients in each
group comes from various centers.
In vivo vs. in vitro studies with [In-111-DTPA-D-Phe1]-Octreotide
Scintigraphy In vitro
Medullary thyroid carcinoma 20/28 71%% 10/26 38%%
Pheochromocytoma 12/14 86%% 38/52 73%%
Carcinoid 69/72 96%% 54/62 88%%
Small cell lung cancer 34/34 100%% 4/7 57%%
Non-small cell lung cancer 36/36 100%% 0/17 0%%
Meningiomas 14/14 100%% 54/55 98%%
Breast cancer 37/50 74%% 33/72 46%%
Non-Hodgkin's Lymphoma 59/74 80%% 0/17 0%%
Hodgkin's disease 23/24 96%% 2/2 100%%
Note that tumors that did not express somatostatin receptors
such as non-small cell lung carcinoma, were nonetheless imaged.
One possible explanation of this finding is that the uptake of
tracer is not by the receptor-negative tumor but by the surrounding
tissues such as somatostatin receptor-positive white blood cells
or neuroendocrine cells nearby the primary tumors. As a matter
of fact, in the case of non-small cell lung cancer, only the primary
tumor can be visualized, not its metastases.
In a prospective study (Lamberts, 1991), 39/52 (75%%) somatostatin
receptor positive primary breast carcinoma could be visualized
by [In-111-DTPA-D-Phe1]-octreotide imaging. Up to 46%% of large
breast tumor samples were somatostatin-receptor positive as determined
in vitro. No prospective controlled trials have been performed
to determine the prognostic implications of a receptor positive
breast tumor. Retrospective studies, however, have shown that
82%% of patients with receptor positive tumors have a 5-year disease-free
survival versus. 46%% for patients with receptor negative breast
tumors (Foekens et al, 1989).
Leitha et al have studied 20 patients with histologically proven
small cell lung cancer with 50 radiologically staged tumor sites
using [I-123-Tyr3]-octreotide. The primary tumor site was visualized
84%% of the time. Lymph node metastases were seen in 73%%. Krenning,
on the other hand, using [In-111-DTPA-D-Phe1]-octreotide found
the primary tumors and their metastases in 100%% of 34 patients
with small cell lung cancer. Only the primary tumors were seen
in 36 patients with non-small cell carcinoma.
Factors which affect Visualization
Factors which could affect the visualization of somatostatin receptor
positive tumors include the secretion of somatostatin by auto-,
para- or endocrine production of somatostatin (such as by pheochromocytoma
and medullary thyroid carcinoma), treatment by somatostatin analogue,
lower affinity of somatostatin analogs by somatostatin receptor
subtypes, and variability of receptor expressions by primary tumor
and its metastases. Krenning et al has noted a number of caveats
which must be considered in the accurate analysis of [In-111-DTPA-D-Phe1]-octreotide
studies:
- in a patient with an upper respiratory infection, nasal and
lung hila uptake can be seen, possibly due to the binding of the
tracer to activated lymphocytes
- external irradiation can cause local pulmonary accumulation
- Bleomycin can also cause pulmonary uptake
- the tracer may accumulate at sites of recent surgery and in
arthritic sites
While [In-111-DTPA-D-Phe1]-octreotide has been used in the diagnosis
and staging of tumors, non-malignant diseases can demonstrate
uptake of the tracer:
- sarcoidosis (23/23 cases)
- Wegener's granulomatosis (4/4)
- tuberculosis (6/6)
Summary:
Somatostatin-receptor imaging can be a useful technique for the
diagnosis of many tumors of neuroendocrine and non-neuroendocrine
origins. A positive finding may be predictive of the ability
of octreotide to suppress the neuroendocrine tumors. Other benefits
include: absence of human antibody response allowing for repeated
administration, whole body imaging, more informed patient management
decisions, optimal therapy selection based on tumor biochemistry
and monitoring of therapy.
References
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