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Using Molecular Imaging to Enhance Decision Making in the Management of Pituitary Adenomas

Waiel Bashari, Russell Senanayake, James MacFarlane, Daniel Gillett, Andrew Powlson, Angelos G. Kolias, Richard Mannion, Olympia Koulouri, Mark Gurnell

2021Journal of Nuclear Medicine21 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

In most patients with suspected or confirmed pituitary adenomas (PAs), MRI, performed using T1-(with or without gadolinium enhancement) and T2-weighted sequences, provides sufficient information to guide effective clinical decision making. In other patients, additional MR sequences (e.g., gradient recalled echo, fluid-attenuation inversion recovery, MR elastography, or MR angiography) may be deployed to improve adenomadetection, assess tumoral consistency, or aid distinction from other sellar/parasellar lesions (e.g., aneurysm, meningioma). However, there remains a small but important subgroup of patients in whom primary or secondary intervention (e.g., first or redo transsphenoidal surgery, stereotactic radiosurgery) is limited by the inability of MRI to accurately localize the site(s) of de novo, persistent, or recurrent PA. Emerging evidence indicates that hybrid imaging, which combines molecular (e.g. 11 C-methionine PET) and cross-sectional (MRI) modalities, can enable the detection and precise localization of sites of active tumor to guide targeted intervention. This not only increases the likelihood of achieving complete remission with preservation of remaining normal pituitary function but may mitigate the need for long-term (even lifelong) high-cost medical therapies. Here, we review published evidence supporting the use of molecular imaging in the management of PAs, including our own 10-y experience with 11 C-methionine PET.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineRadiosurgeryRadiologyPituitary adenomaMagnetic resonance imagingNeuroradiologyMeningiomaAdenomaNuclear medicineRadiation therapyPathologyNeurologyPsychiatryPituitary Gland Disorders and TreatmentsGlioma Diagnosis and TreatmentAdrenal and Paraganglionic Tumors