• Pancreatic Endocrine Tumors: Tumor Blood Flow Assessed with Perfusion CT Reflects Angiogenesis and Correlates with Prognostic Factors

    Gaspard dAssignies, MD Anne Couvelard, MD StephaneBahrami, MD Marie-Pierre Vulfierme, MD Pascal Hammel, MD Olivia Hentic, MD Alain Sauvanet, MD Pierre Bedossa, MD Philippe Ruszniewski, MD Valerie Vilgrain, MD

    Purpose: To prospectively correlate multidetector computed tomo­graphic (CT) perfusion measurement of pancreatic endo­crine tumors with tumor microvascular density (MVD) assessed by using histologic techniques and to determine whether perfusion CT parameters differ between tumor grades.

    Materials and Methods: Institutional review board approval and informed consent were obtained. Thirty-six patients (15 men, 21 women; mean age, 53 years; range, 18-78 years) with resectable pancreatic endocrine tumors underwent presurgical dy­namic perfusion CT. Twenty-eight (78%) of 36 patients were included in the study group; eight were excluded because of artifacts that were not compatible with perfu­sion postprocessing. Multidetector CT perfusion data were analyzed to calculate tumor and normal pancreatic blood How, blood volume, mean transit time, and permeability-surface area product. Multidetector CT perfusion parame- ters were compared with intratumoral MVD by using the Spearman correlation coefficient and with World Health Organization (WHO) classification, tumor size, tumor pro­liferation index, hormonal profile, and presence of metas­tases by using Mann-Whitney tests.

    Results: High correlation (r = 0.620, P < .001) was observed between tumor blood flow and intratumoral MVD. Blood flow was significantly higher (P = .02) in the group of benign tumors (WHO 1) than in the groups of tumors of indeterminate prognosis (WHO 2) or well-differentiated carcinomas (WHO 3). Blood flow was significantly higher in tumors with a proliferation index of 2% or less (P = .005) and in those without histologic signs of microscopic vascular involvement (P = .008). Mean transit time was longer in tumors with lymph node (P = .02) or liver (P = .05) metastasis.

    Conclusion: Perfusion CT is feasible in patients with pancreatic endo­crine tumors and reflects MVD. Perfusion CT measure­ments are correlated with histoprognostic factors, such as proliferation index and WHO classification.