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Test Predicts If Breast Cancer Chemotherapy Will Work
RESTON, VA -- June 3, 2002 -- Resistance to chemotherapy is a
major cause of treatment failure in patients with breast cancer.
A study reported in the June issue of The Journal of Nuclear
Medicine found that scintigraphic imaging with 99mTc-sestamibi
accurately predicted which breast tumors would be chemoresistant.
The study was able to predict 100% of the time which patients
would respond to chemotherapy, and 83% of the time which patients
would not respond. Physicians in this phase II clinical trial
studied 30 patients with untreated locally advanced breast cancer
for whom a cycle of chemotherapy followed by surgery was planned.
The patients received an injection of 99mTc-sestamibi and were
scanned before treatment and again before surgery.
Those who were likely to respond had a low wash-out rate, or WOR
(<45%) of the 99mTc-sestamibi. That means a higher amount
of it remained in the body after injection, and showed up in
the scan. Those unlikely to respond had a higher WOR (>45%).
The authors pointed out that knowing a tumor was likely to be
chemoresistant would allow physicians to prescribe specific drugs
to boost the body's ability to respond to chemotherapy.
Results of the first test were analyzed to determine the amount
of radiotracer uptake in the tumor at 10 minutes and 240 minutes,
and the washout rate was calculated. The second scan was used
diagnostically to confirm tumor response to treatment and the
pretherapy therapy result.
Results were also confirmed pathologically
by the subsequent surgery.
Scintigraphy is an imaging technique
that uses radioisotopes and a gamma camera.
[06/03/2002; Doctor's Guide]
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