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Published in: European Journal of Nuclear Medicine and Molecular Imaging 12/2015

01-11-2015 | Original Article

18F-FDG PET/CT following chemoradiation of uterine cervix cancer provides powerful prognostic stratification independent of HPV status: a prospective cohort of 105 women with mature survival data

Authors: Shankar Siva, Siddhartha Deb, Richard J. Young, Rodney J. Hicks, Jason Callahan, Mathias Bressel, Linda Mileshkin, Danny Rischin, David Bernshaw, Kailash Narayan

Published in: European Journal of Nuclear Medicine and Molecular Imaging | Issue 12/2015

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Abstract

Purpose

To report 5-year outcomes of a prospective registry study investigating posttherapy FDG PET/CT in women with locally advanced cervical cancer. A secondary analysis assessing the prognostic significance of HPV infection was performed.

Methods

Patients underwent definitive chemoradiation followed by a single FDG PET/CT scan for response assessment. A complete metabolic response (CMR) was defined as no evidence of FDG-avid disease. Patients were dichotomized according to HPV infection status into a ‘higher-risk’ group and a ‘lower-risk’ group, with the higher-risk group comprising those with alpha-7 strain HPV (subtypes 18, 39 and 45) and those who were HPV-negative and the lower-risk group comprising those with alpha-9 strain HPV (subtypes 16, 31, 33, 52 and 58) and those with mixed strains. Survival outcomes, patterns of failure and salvage therapy outcomes were investigated for their association with metabolic response and HPV status.

Results

In 105 patients the median prospective follow-up was 5.2 years. The 5-year cancer-specific, overall and progression-free survival rates in patients with a CMR were 97 %, 93 % and 86 %, respectively. In patients without a CMR, the corresponding 5-year survival rates were 36 %, 22 % and 0 % respectively (p < 0.01). PET response was associated with patterns of failure (p < 0.01), with the 5-year freedom from local, nodal and distant failure in patients with a CMR being 94 %, 90 % and 94 %, respectively. Of 16 patients who underwent salvage therapy, 12 had disease detected on the surveillance PET scan, and 8 achieved a post-salvage CMR of whom all were alive at a median of 4.9 years. DNA adequate for HPV analysis was extracted in 68 patients. The likelihood of a PET metabolic response was not influenced by HPV infection status, with 71 % and 75 % of higher-risk and lower-risk patients, respectively, achieving CMR (p = 0.83). Higher-risk patients had a poorer OS (HR 2.6, range 1.0 – 6.6, p = 0.05) in univariable analysis but not multivariable analysis (p = 0.11).

Conclusion

At 5 years CMR remains a powerful factor predicting survival after initial and salvage therapy. Metabolic response was not associated with HPV infection risk. Further studies are required to establish the association with HPV infection risk and survival after chemoradiation.
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Metadata
Title
18F-FDG PET/CT following chemoradiation of uterine cervix cancer provides powerful prognostic stratification independent of HPV status: a prospective cohort of 105 women with mature survival data
Authors
Shankar Siva
Siddhartha Deb
Richard J. Young
Rodney J. Hicks
Jason Callahan
Mathias Bressel
Linda Mileshkin
Danny Rischin
David Bernshaw
Kailash Narayan
Publication date
01-11-2015
Publisher
Springer Berlin Heidelberg
Published in
European Journal of Nuclear Medicine and Molecular Imaging / Issue 12/2015
Print ISSN: 1619-7070
Electronic ISSN: 1619-7089
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00259-015-3112-8

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