Abstract
Purpose
Sentinel lymph node (SLN) biopsy is rarely used for thyroid carcinoma staging. This is due to challenges associated with conventional Tc-99m-labeled tracers, often producing a large hotspot at the injection site, potentially hiding nearby SLNs (shine-through effect). The aim of this study was to demonstrate the feasibility and effectiveness of SLN visualization using the new PET tracer [68Ga]Ga-tilmanocept.
Methods
Patients with thyroid carcinoma underwent ultrasound-guided peritumoral injection of [68Ga]Ga-tilmanocept and ICG-[99mTc]Tc-nanocolloid. [68Ga]Ga-tilmanocept PET/CT scans were conducted at 15 min and 60 min post-injection to visualize the SLNs. SLN biopsy was performed using ICG-[99mTc]TC-nanocolloid for intraoperative identification. The corresponding lymph node level was resected for reference.
Results
Seven differentiated thyroid carcinoma (DTC) and 3 medullary thyroid carcinoma (MTC) patients were included, of which 6 were clinically node-negative. The median number of SLNs detected on [68Ga]Ga-tilmanocept PET/CT and resected was 3 (range 1–4) and 3 (range 1–5), respectively. Eight SLNs were found on PET/CT in the central compartment and 19 in the lateral compartment. The SLN procedure detected (micro)metastases in all patients except one. Seventeen of 27 pathologically assessed SLNs were positive, 8 negative, and 2 did not contain lymph node tissue, which led to upstaging in 5 out of 6 clinically node-negative patients.
Conclusions
[68Ga]Ga-tilmanocept PET/CT identified SLNs in all patients, mainly in the lateral neck. The SLNs were successfully surgically detected and resected using ICG-[99mTc]Tc-nanocolloid. This technique has the potential to improve neck staging, enabling more personalized treatment of thyroid cancer according to the lymph node status.Trial registration
2021–002470-42 (EudraCT).
Overview publication
| Title | Sentinel lymph node detection in thyroid carcinoma using [68Ga]Ga-tilmanocept PET/CT: a proof-of-concept study |
| Date | January 1st, 2024 |
| Issue name | European Journal of Nuclear Medicine and Molecular Imaging |
| Issue number | v51.2 p512-520 |
| DOI | 10.1007/s00259-023-06449-0 |
| Authors | |
| MTGs | MTG8 |
| Read | Read publication |
