Pictorial essay: incidental findings on 18F-Fluciclovine PET/CT scan

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Abstract

Introduction: Fluorine-18 (18F) Fluciclovine (anti-1-amino-3-18F-fluorocyclobutane- 1-carboxylic acid [FACBC]) is a synthetic amino acid labeled with 18F, currently used as PET radiopharmaceutical to investigating prostate cancer, namely in the recurrent setting. Fluciclovine is transported to cell membranes by amino acid transporters, such as LAT1 and ASCT2. The upregulation of LAT-1 and ASCT2 activities is typical of prostate cancer but is also present in other pathological conditions such as non-prostatic neoplasms (e.g., lung cancer) and in benign inflammatory process (e.g., benign prostatic hyperplasia, chronic prostatitis, high-grade prostatic hyperplasia intraepithelial). Methods: In this short essay we present a retrospective FACBC PET/CT analysis consisting of a selection of the five most relevant cases of patients referred in our centre to FACBC PET/CT for prostate cancer, with concomitant FACBC uptake in sites atyipical for prostate cancer. Results: These five selected cases demonstrate FACBC uptake at the level of the pancreatic head, adrenal incidentalomas, pulmonary nodules, mediastinal lymph nodes and neoformative tissue of the rectal wall. Discussion: Clinical cases selected in this pictorial essay have demonstrated that Fluciclovine is not an exclusive and specific radiotracer for prostate cancer and, therefore, can induce misdiagnosis. In fact, incidental benign and malignant uptake might occur and should be further evaluated with clinical correlation or other imaging.

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Romagnolo, C., Cottignoli, C., Palucci, A., Biscontini, G., Fringuelli, F. M., & Burroni, L. (2021). Pictorial essay: incidental findings on 18F-Fluciclovine PET/CT scan. Clinical and Translational Imaging, 9(2), 189–198. https://doi.org/10.1007/s40336-021-00412-5

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