| Aug. 13, 2002
New PET/CT Scanner Offers View To The Future INDIANAPOLIS - A new imaging device in the Indiana University Department
of Radiology is making it easier for physicians to diagnose and treat
cancer and other diseases. The Indiana University School of Medicine was one of the first three
institutions in the nation to receive a PET/CT fusion imaging system.
The Siemens Biograph system was installed at IU in December 2001, and
already, physicians are looking to the future. The Department of Radiology
is in the process of purchasing a second PET/CT for nearly $2.5 million. The state-of-the-art diagnostic scanner can give radiologists a more
comprehensive look at tumor growth for the staging of cancers, location
of tumors, and the effectiveness of therapeutic agents and/or surgery.
It also will enable earlier detection and more accurate diagnosis of cardiovascular
and neurological diseases, and improve therapy and monitoring. "Within the next two or three years, I think PET/CT will be a first-line
procedure in the management of patients with cancer," said James
Fletcher, M.D., director of nuclear medicine and director of the Clinical
PET Imaging Center at the IU School of Medicine. PET imaging uses radiopharmaceutical tracers in the body that measures
metabolic, biochemical and functional activity in living tissue. CT -
more commonly called CAT scans - produces a series of images showing anatomical
structure and abnormalities that do not normally show up on conventional
X-rays. PET or positron emission tomography has been available for clinical use
since 1990 but wasn't routinely used for cancer management until it received
initial Medicare coverage for lung cancer in January 1998. Its use for
diagnosis, initial cancer staging and evaluation of response to therapy
has expanded greatly since that time. It also is an effective tool for
physicians wanting to "see" the viability of tissue in the heart
and to study brain metabolism for tumors and diseases such as Alzheimers. Its biggest limitation is poor spatial resolution, says Gary Hutchins,
Ph.D., director of Imaging Science and vice chairman of research in the
Department of Radiology. On the other hand, he adds, CT images excel at
showing spatial context. The dual modality has brought a new dimension,
literally, to his research into the mechanisms of cancer growth. "In certain common cancers, CT has been wrong in over half the instances
where CT indicated the patient's cancer was operable," said Dr. Fletcher.
"CT also often can miss metastatic sites." Combining the two technologies overcomes the limitations of either technology
individually and gives physicians the closest thing to 20-20 vision available
by letting them better identify and localize abnormalities. "We now can find tumor sites not seen just through PET or CT alone,"
Dr. Fletcher says. PET/CT gives physicians a better look at disease sites
to determine if surgery is an option or if the cancer has spread beyond
the point where surgery is recommended. The combined imaging also offers physicians an opportunity at the outset of chemotherapy to see if the drug is working. If not, the protocol can be changed avoiding a long, ineffective treatment regimen for cancer patients. # # # Media Contact: Mary Hardin
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