BACKGROUND. Considerable numbers of patients with low-grade gliomas experie
nce an early malignant course and may benefit from aggressive treatment. Th
ese patients are difficult to identify using established prognostic factors
. A retrospective study was performed to determine whether the C-11-methion
ine uptake in tumor is a survival factor in adult patients with supratentor
ial gliomas classified as World Health Organization Grade 2.
METHODS. The authors identified 89 patients with histologically confirmed l
ow-grade gliomas in whom an C-11-methionine positron emission tomography (P
ET) scan had been performed as part of the diagnostic tumor investigation f
rom 1983 to 1998. Clinical data were collected, and the PET scans were re-e
valuated according to a fixed protocol. The C-11-methionine uptake in the t
umor and relevant clinical parameters were entered into univariate and mult
ivariate survival analyses.
RESULTS. At the end of the study, 49 patients (55. 1%) had died. The median
overall survival was 5.7 years. Low methionine uptake was significantly fa
vorable in the multivariate survival analysis (P = 0.04) along with oligode
ndroglioma (P = 0.003). In the histologic subgroups, C-11-methionine uptake
was an important survival factor among patients with astrocytomas (P = 0.0
5) and oligodendrogliomas (P = 0.03). Tumor resection was a favorable progn
ostic factor in patients with high methionine uptake (P = 0.01) but not in
patients with low uptake.
CONCLUSIONS. Baseline C-11-methionine PET is a prognostic indicator in pati
ents with low-grade gliomas. The results imply that PET is a valuable tool
in the clinical management of these patients and may assist in the selectio
n of patients for therapy. (C) 2001 American Cancer Society.