Appropriate use of morphological imaging for assessing treatment response and disease progression of neuroendocrine tumors

IF 6.1 1区 医学 Q1 ENDOCRINOLOGY & METABOLISM
Maxime Ronot (Radiologist) , Marco Dioguardi Burgio (Radiologist) , Jules Gregory (Radiologist) , Olivia Hentic (Pancreatologist) , Marie-Pierre Vullierme (Radiologist) , Philippe Ruszniewski (Pancreatologist) , Magaly Zappa (Radiologist) , Louis de Mestier (Pancreatologist)
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Neuroendocrine tumors (NETs) are relatively rare neoplasms displaying heterogeneous clinical behavior, ranging from indolent to aggressive forms. Patients diagnosed with NETs usually receive a varied array of treatments, including somatostatin analogs, locoregional treatments (ablation, intra-arterial therapy), cytotoxic chemotherapy, peptide receptor radionuclide therapy (PRRT), and targeted therapies. To maximize therapeutic efficacy while limiting toxicity (both physical and economic), there is a need for accurate and reliable tools to monitor disease evolution and progression and to assess the effectiveness of these treatments. Imaging morphological methods, primarily relying on computed tomography (CT) and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), are indispensable modalities for the initial evaluation and continuous monitoring of patients with NETs, therefore playing a pivotal role in gauging the response to treatment. The primary goal of assessing tumor response is to anticipate and weigh the benefits of treatments, especially in terms of survival gain. The World Health Organization took the pioneering step of introducing assessment criteria based on cross-sectional imaging. This initial proposal standardized the measurement of lesion sizes, laying the groundwork for subsequent criteria. The Response Evaluation Criteria in Solid Tumors (RECIST) subsequently refined and enhanced these standards, swiftly gaining acceptance within the oncology community. New treatments were progressively introduced, targeting specific features of NETs (such as tumor vascularization or expression of specific receptors), and achieving significant qualitative changes within tumors, although associated with minimal or paradoxical effects on tumor size. Several alternative criteria, adapted from those used in other cancer types and focusing on tumor viability, the slow growth of NETs, or refining the existing size-based RECIST criteria, have been proposed in NETs. This review article aims to describe and discuss the optimal utilization of CT and MRI for assessing the response of NETs to treatment; it provides a comprehensive overview of established and emerging criteria for evaluating tumor response, along with comparative analyses. Molecular imaging will not be addressed here and is covered in a dedicated article within this special issue.

形态学成像在评估神经内分泌肿瘤治疗反应和疾病进展中的适当应用。
神经内分泌肿瘤(NETs)是一种相对罕见的肿瘤,表现出不同的临床行为,从惰性到侵袭性。被诊断为NETs的患者通常接受各种治疗,包括生长抑素类似物、局部治疗(消融、动脉内治疗)、细胞毒性化疗、肽受体放射性核素治疗(PRRT)和靶向治疗。为了最大限度地提高治疗效果,同时限制毒性(物理和经济),需要准确可靠的工具来监测疾病的演变和进展,并评估这些治疗的有效性。主要依靠计算机断层扫描(CT)和磁共振成像(MRI)的成像形态学方法是对NETs患者进行初步评估和持续监测的不可或缺的模式,因此在衡量治疗反应方面发挥着关键作用。评估肿瘤反应的主要目标是预测和权衡治疗的益处,尤其是在生存率方面。世界卫生组织率先引入了基于横断面成像的评估标准。这项最初的提案标准化了病变大小的测量,为随后的标准奠定了基础。实体瘤反应评估标准(RECIST)随后完善并增强了这些标准,迅速获得肿瘤学界的认可。新的治疗方法被逐步引入,靶向NETs的特定特征(如肿瘤血管形成或特定受体的表达),并在肿瘤内实现了显著的质量变化,尽管对肿瘤大小的影响很小或自相矛盾。在NETs中提出了几种替代标准,这些标准适用于其他癌症类型,并侧重于肿瘤生存能力、NETs的缓慢生长或完善现有的基于大小的RECIST标准。这篇综述文章旨在描述和讨论CT和MRI在评估NETs对治疗的反应方面的最佳利用;它提供了一个已建立和新出现的评估肿瘤反应的标准的全面概述,以及比较分析。分子成像将不在这里讨论,并在本特刊的一篇专门文章中介绍。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
11.90
自引率
0.00%
发文量
77
审稿时长
6-12 weeks
期刊介绍: Best Practice & Research Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism is a serial publication that integrates the latest original research findings into evidence-based review articles. These articles aim to address key clinical issues related to diagnosis, treatment, and patient management. Each issue adopts a problem-oriented approach, focusing on key questions and clearly outlining what is known while identifying areas for future research. Practical management strategies are described to facilitate application to individual patients. The series targets physicians in practice or training.
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