Purpose: To evaluate the reproducibility of 2-[11C]thymidine positron emission tomography (PET) scanning in patients with advanced intra-abdominal malignancies.
Patients and methods: The reproducibility of 2-[11C]thymidine PET was studied by comparing interpatient and intrapatient variability (coefficient of variability, COV) of both blood and tissue data. Arterial plasma metabolite levels were measured using on-line sampling and high-pressure liquid chromatography. 2-[11C]Thymidine retention in tissue was measured as the standardized uptake value at the end of the scan (SUV(end)), the area under the time-activity curve (AUC(0-1 hour)), and the fractional retention of thymidine (FRT). A group of seven patients were scanned 1 week apart with no intervening anticancer therapy.
Results: There was interpatient variability in the levels of 2-[11C]thymidine and its main metabolite, 11CO2, in plasma. Variability in 2-[11C]thymidine PET data was greater between (COV: SUV(end) = 38%, AUC(0-1 hour) = 32%, FRT = 47%) than within (COV: SUV(end) = 8%, AUC(0-1 hour) = 2%, FRT = 9%) patients. There was a borderline significant difference between the paired tumor data for SUV(end) (P = 0.041), but not for AUC(0-1 hour) (P = 0.81) or FRT (P = 0.90). There was a good correlation between paired data for SUV(end) (r = 0.98), AUC(0-1 hour) (r = 0.99), and FRT (r = 0.95).
Conclusions: This is the first report showing that 2-[11C]thymidine PET scanning is reproducible in humans. Repeat scanning of tumor proliferation using 2-[11C]thymidine PET is feasible to perform in human intra-abdominal malignancies and should aid the future rapid assessment of antiproliferative tumor agents.