I recently learned about the utility of AA-PET for brain to help distinguish between radiation necrosis and tumor recurrence. Just curious if any of you use this, and if so, who is the vendor.
Would love to see if something useful opened up in this space. It is a struggle...in my area some neuro rads guys like MR perfusion or MR spec, some don't. We have a robust CNS program (for a community regional cancer center) with well trained neurosurgeron and neuro rads/neuro IR guys and we struggle with this diagnosis on the imaging side. Even with those images I still get very equiovocal reads and don't have confidence in them.
I switched to MR Perfusion from SPECT, as I don't think I had anything other than a hedge read with SPECT. I've had some more definitive calls with Perfusion, but it's still nowhere near where it needs to be.
I'll ping my neuro-oncs and see if they've heard of AA-PET.
Very intriguing. On a related note, I’ve tried to order a dotatate PET for meningioma treatment planning, and it was flat out denied by Medicare because the diagnosis code is not in the list of approved codes. I imagine there would be a similar issue with AA PET. Anyone have some advice?
Very intriguing. On a related note, I’ve tried to order a dotatate PET for meningioma treatment planning, and it was flat out denied by Medicare because the diagnosis code is not in the list of approved codes. I imagine there would be a similar issue with AA PET. Anyone have some advice?
Yea I used D32. An academic rad onc said he codes meningiomas as neuroendocrine tumors to get the pet approved, which seems like fraud so I haven’t done it.
I recently learned about the utility of AA-PET for brain to help distinguish between radiation necrosis and tumor recurrence. Just curious if any of you use this, and if so, who is the vendor.
So, one can actually use almost all the available amino acid PETs for this. I most commonly send for fluciclovine (Axumin) cause most PET centers still stock it pretty frequently (despite it being inferior to PSMA), but have also successfully used F-DOPA and C-methionine. Gamechangers!
Very intriguing. On a related note, I’ve tried to order a dotatate PET for meningioma treatment planning, and it was flat out denied by Medicare because the diagnosis code is not in the list of approved codes. I imagine there would be a similar issue with AA PET. Anyone have some advice?
I code these as neuroendocrine tumors (D3A), which is accurate because they express the somatostatin-2 receptor (which is what is being imaged), and just have a one-liner in my note that meningiomas are classifiable in the neuroendocrine family because of their SSTR2 expressivity.
Amino acid PET is an established method to assist differential diagnosis of therapy-related changes versus recurrence in gliomas. However, its diagnostic value in brain metastases is yet to be determined. The goal of this study was to summarize evidence on the diagnostic utility of amino acid...
jnm.snmjournals.org
Will have to see if local rads willing to pick a tracer. 84% PPV is pretty good. Enough to hedge on re-treatment in many cases (now just a clinical decision making disaster).
Interestingly, Axumin trial excluded from this analysis.
The study aims to evaluate whether combined 18F-FACBC PET/MRI could provide additional diagnostic information compared with MRI alone in brain metastases. Eighteen patients with newly diagnosed or suspected recurrence of brain metastases received ...
Amino acid PET is an established method to assist differential diagnosis of therapy-related changes versus recurrence in gliomas. However, its diagnostic value in brain metastases is yet to be determined. The goal of this study was to summarize evidence on the diagnostic utility of amino acid...
jnm.snmjournals.org
Will have to see if local rads willing to pick a tracer. 84% PPV is pretty good. Enough to hedge on re-treatment in many cases (now just a clinical decision making disaster).
Interestingly, Axumin trial excluded from this analysis.
The study aims to evaluate whether combined 18F-FACBC PET/MRI could provide additional diagnostic information compared with MRI alone in brain metastases. Eighteen patients with newly diagnosed or suspected recurrence of brain metastases received ...
I’m happy to pick whatever will get paid for. Problem is, these tracers are expensive. Facbc is at least 4k a dose. If insurance (or CMS) aren’t paying, we either bill the patient (freestanding/idtf) or the hospital eats the cost (which means they won’t schedule the patient)
There were some changes to help with reimbursement for expensive tracers but I haven’t seen material improvements…
So, one can actually use almost all the available amino acid PETs for this. I most commonly send for fluciclovine (Axumin) cause most PET centers still stock it pretty frequently (despite it being inferior to PSMA), but have also successfully used F-DOPA and C-methionine. Gamechangers!
It’s not that they stock it. It’s available from the commercial radiopharmacy they order from still carries it. If someone wants it and the payer will pay it, we’ll order and scan it.