PET/CT in Rare Autoimmune Diseases: Clinical Insights

Use of Pet/CT in different scenarios on rare and orphan diseases of autoimmune origin

REVIEW ARTICLE

Sanchez Orduz Liseth1, Acuña Hernandez Mayrlin2, Gerardo H. Cortés Germán3

  1. Nuclear Medicine Specialist, Nuclear Medicine Department, Hospital Universitario Mayor Méderi, Bogotá, Colombia
  2. Nuclear Medicine Specialist, Nuclear Medicine Department, Hospital de Cancerología INC, Bogotá, Colombia
  3. Nuclear Medicine Specialist, Tashadi SLS and Clínica del Country, Bogotá, Colombia

Email: [email protected]

OPEN ACCESS

PUBLISHED: 31 December 2024

CITATION: Sánchez Orduz, L., Acuña Hernandez, M., et al., 2024. Use of PET/CT in different scenarios on rare and orphan diseases of autoimmune origin. Medical Research Archives, (online) 12(12).
https://doi.org/10.18103/mra.v12i12.5994

COPYRIGHT: © 2024 European Society of Medicine. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.

DOI https://doi.org/10.18103/mra.v12i12.5994

ISSN 2375-1924


ABSTRACT

Autoimmune diseases are on the rise, likely due to many factors such as pollution, infections, dietary changes, climate modifications, and exposure to xenobiotics. These diseases impact individuals, society, and healthcare systems. Some diseases are well-known, such as type 1 diabetes, while others are orphan or rare diseases.

According to the WHO, rare diseases affect fewer than five people per 10,000 inhabitants, and there are over 7,000 diseases. These conditions generally have low prevalence, are mostly chronically debilitating, and typically lack treatment.

In 2013, the European Society of Nuclear Medicine and the Society of Nuclear Medicine and Molecular Imaging published guidelines for using [¹⁸F]FDG (the main radiotracer) in PET/CT studies of inflammation and infection. The use of this radiotracer has expanded in recent decades.

Our objective was to describe the use of PET/CT and its various radiotracers in rare or orphan autoimmune diseases classified in ICD-11. To achieve this, we followed the methodology outlined by the Joanna Briggs Institute for scoping reviews.

Seventy-seven articles were included in the thematic analysis; 71 were case reports, while the rest were case series and cross-sectional studies. The predominant finding in the PET/CT scans of the different pathologies was an increase in the uptake of various radiotracers, with [¹⁸F]FDG being the most commonly used.

This diagnostic tool provided a comprehensive view of the systemic involvement of multiple conditions, such as Castleman disease and Cogan syndrome. It helped to identify the primary tumor and guide therapies for diseases like acromegaly.

Introduction

According to the World Health Organization (WHO)¹, orphan or rare diseases include around 5,500 diseases that can affect approximately 30 million people in the United States, according to the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA)².

European Commission³, considering rare diseases have a low prevalence of 5 per 10,000 people, are potentially fatal, chronically debilitating, and have a genetic origin.

In the United States, the National Conference of State Legislatures⁴ defines them as diseases affecting fewer than 200,000 Americans, considering them neglected diseases. Their treatments are not profitable due to their cost.

This type of pathology presents a diagnosis, treatment, and follow-up challenge. The natural history of these diseases needs to be better known and studied. Their biology is complex, leading to difficulties in developing drugs, biological products, and devices to treat these conditions.

For this reason, in 1997, INSERM (French National Institute of Health and Medical Research), with subsequent support from the European Commission starting in 2002, created the Orphanet strategy⁵. This strategy includes multiple medical aspects of this type of pathology, including a comprehensive classification for the methodology explained later.

As for autoimmune diseases, the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID)⁶ and the National Cancer Institute (NCI) define these pathologies as those in which antibodies are formed that attack the immune system.

The National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES), a study program by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), found that approximately 32% of adults aged 60 or older may have at least four autoantibodies. Globally, an increase in the frequency of autoimmune diseases has been observed, with an estimated annual increase in incidence and prevalence of 19.1% and 12.5%, respectively⁸.

In recent years, there has been a rise in the use of Positron Emission Tomography/Computed Tomography (PET/CT), as it is a non-invasive imaging study used as a diagnostic method in various clinical scenarios: detection, classification, staging, prognosis, treatment planning, evaluation of response to therapy, and surveillance in oncological, cardiovascular, neurological, inflammatory, and infectious disorders, among others⁹.

We did not find a specific list of autoimmune and orphan diseases; therefore, we combined the lists to identify orphan autoimmune diseases.

For this reason, this scoping review aims to describe the different PET/CT tracers used in rare or orphan diseases of autoimmune origin, as defined in the ICD-11 classification.


Methodology

REVIEW QUESTION

What utility and characteristics are reported in the literature regarding using PET/CT with its different tracers in autoimmune orphan diseases?

The databases of available orphan diseases from Orphanet and autoimmune diseases from the Global Autoimmune Institute were cross-referenced, resulting in a list of orphan autoimmune diseases.

The study employed the broad population, concept, and context (PCC) framework indicated by the Joanna Briggs Institute for scoping reviews, as illustrated in Figure 1.


Figure 1. PCC framework in this study

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ELIGIBILITY CRITERIA

Articles were deemed eligible for inclusion if they reported case reports, case series, descriptive, or analytical observational studies published without date limitation that included the orphan autoimmune diseases from the cross-referenced list created for this study in which a PET/CT study had been conducted.

During the literature review, the following diseases were excluded due to the quantity and quality of available information, which allows for the execution of systematic reviews: polymyositis, immune-mediated necrotizing myopathy, psoriatic arthritis, psoriasis, sarcoidosis, reactive arthritis, rheumatoid arthritis, Sjögren’s syndrome, systemic lupus erythematosus, acute disseminated encephalomyelitis, multiple sclerosis, myopathies, myositis, myasthenia gravis, connective tissue diseases, Guillain-Barré syndrome, IgG4-related disease, giant cell arteritis, antiphospholipid syndrome, granulomatosis with polyangiitis, autoimmune hepatitis, autoimmune pancreatitis, dermatomyositis, acute disseminated encephalomyelitis, and autoimmune diseases of the nervous system.


SEARCH STRATEGY

Initially, considering the methodology described by the Joanna Briggs Institute for scoping reviews, two researchers conducted a systematic search independently in indexed databases such as MEDLINE, OVID (including Embase), Cochrane Library Epistemonikos, Scielo, LILACS, and JBI Evidence Synthesis and gray literature such as OpenGrey and GreyNet using all the keywords included in the DECS, MESH, and Entry Terms. Annex 1 contains the search methodology.


SOURCE OF EVIDENCE SELECTION

All search results articles were uploaded to Software Mendeley, and duplicates were removed. Subsequently, two independent reviewers assessed the titles and abstracts, selecting the compositions according to the inclusion and exclusion criteria for the review. When there were disagreements between the reviewers, an additional reviewer was consulted, and agreement was reached.

This section’s results are presented as a flow diagram (Figure 2) following the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-analyses extension for scoping review (PRISMA-ScR) guidelines.

Figure 2. Flow diagram source of evidence

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DATA EXTRACTION

For data extraction, two reviewers considered specific details of the articles, such as authors, year of publication, type of study, disease, PET/CT tracer, and main findings.

The items to be assessed by the two reviewers were not disagreeable, and complete information was found in the included articles to evaluate the results.


Results

The results obtained from the literature review are summarized by disease in the tables described below.


Table 1. Acromegaly

Authors Year of publication Type of Study PET/CT Tracer Main Findings
Bashari et al.¹⁰ 2020 Cross-sectional L-[methyl¹¹C]-methionine or L-[carboxyl¹¹C]methionine Focal tracer uptake in the lateral sellar and parasellar region

Disease: Acromegaly

Authors Year Type of Study PET/CT Tracer Main Findings
Daniel et al.¹¹ 2021 Cross-sectional [⁶⁸Ga]Ga-DOTA-TATE A significant inverse relationship between postoperative values and the SUVmax at the sellar region
Daya et al.¹² 2021 Case report [⁶⁸Ga]Ga-DOTA-TATE Receptor activity in the pituitary gland due to physiological somatostatin receptor expression
Ahsan et al.¹³ 2021 Case report [⁶⁸Ga]Ga-DOTA-TOC Hyperplastic left adrenal gland with increased radiotracer uptake compared to the right
Alobaid et al.¹⁴ 2023 Case report [⁶⁸Ga]Ga-DOTA-PEPTIDE Intense focus on the uptake of the pituitary gland
Haberbosch et al.¹⁵ 2023 Case report L-[methyl¹¹C]-methionine Uptake on the left side of the sellar region
Chiloire et al.¹⁶ 2024 Case report [¹⁸F]FDG Excluded the presence of cancer
Bakker et al.¹⁷ 2024 Case series [¹⁸F]FET Suspicious parasellar tracer uptake

Table 2. Aplastic Anemia, Aplastic Anemia and Systemic Lupus Erythematosus, and Bullous Pemphigoid

Disease: Aplastic Anemia

Authors Year Type of Study PET/CT Tracer Main Findings
Matsuki et al.¹⁸ 2024 Case report [¹⁸F]FDG Uptake of [¹⁸F]FDG pleura and lung

Disease: Aplastic Anemia AND Systemic Lupus Erythematosus

Authors Year Type of Study PET/CT Tracer Main Findings
Dudek et al.¹⁹ 2024 Case report [¹⁸F]FDG Hypometabolic bone marrow activity

Disease: Bullous Pemphigoid

Authors Year Type of Study PET/CT Tracer Main Findings
Shrestha et al.²⁰ 2022 Case report [¹⁸F]FDG Left mediastinal lymphadenopathy and lung lesion
Grünig et al.²¹ 2022 Case report [¹⁸F]FDG Multiple small lesions of the skin distant from known primary tumor locations

Table 3. Chagas Disease

Disease: Chagas Disease

AuthorsYearType of StudyPET/CT TracerMain Findings
Moll-Bernardes et al.²²2020Case report[¹⁸F]FDG AND [⁶⁸Ga]Ga-DOTA-TOCIncreased radiotracer uptake in the mid inferoseptal, mid anteroseptal, and basal inferolateral walls of the left ventricle
de Oliveira et al.²³2023Cross-sectional[¹⁸F]FDG AND [⁶⁸Ga]Ga-DOTA-TOC[¹⁸F]FDG AND [⁶⁸Ga]Ga-DOTA-TOC uptake useful for detection of myocardial inflammation; [⁶⁸Ga]Ga-DOTA-TOC uptake may be associated with malignant arrhythmia

Table 4. Castleman’s Disease

Disease: Castleman’s disease

AuthorsYearType of StudyPET/CT TracerMain Findings
Reddy et al.²⁴2018Case series[¹⁸F]FDGUptake in cervical, mediastinal, and pelvic lymph nodes; sclerotic bone lesions
Liu et al.²⁵2023Case report[¹⁸F]FDGUptake in mesenteric lymph node and multiple lung nodules with slight FDG uptake
Zhang et al.²⁶2023Case report[¹⁸F]FDGUptake in abdominal cavity
Maqbool et al.²⁷2023Case report[¹⁸F]FDGUptake right-sided neck mass and other lymph nodes of the head and neck
Yamauchi et al.²⁸2023Case report[¹⁸F]FDGFDG uptake in idiopathic multicentric Castleman disease lower than in Hodgkin lymphoma
Zuo et al.²⁹2024Case report[⁶⁸Ga]Ga-DOTA-TATE / [⁶⁸Ga]Ga-PentixaforPositive uptake in retroperitoneal mass
Aher P et al.³⁰2024Case report[¹⁸F]FDGMixed-density mass with uptake in right cardiogenic region
Mashal et al.³¹2024Case report[¹⁸F]FDGUptake in supraclavicular, mediastinal, and retroperitoneal lymph nodes; diffuse uptake in spleen and soft-tissue nodules
Hu et al.³²2024Case report[¹⁸F]FDGUptake in lymph nodes, spleen, bones, bone marrow, and nasopharynx associated with multicentric Castleman disease

Table 5. Castleman’s Disease AND POEMS Syndrome & Cogan’s Syndrome

Disease: Castleman’s disease AND POEMS Syndrome

AuthorsYearTypePET/CTFindings
Choe et al.³³2024Case report[¹⁸F]FDGMultiple lymph nodes, L1 sclerotic lesion, edema, hepatosplenomegaly

Disease: Cogan’s Syndrome

AuthorsYearTypePET/CTFindings
Balink et al.³⁴2007Case report[¹⁸F]FDGUptake in aortic arch wall extending into lateral wall
Örsal et al.³⁵2014Case report[¹⁸F]FDGUptake in arterial walls and knees
Cabezas-Rodríguez et al.³⁶2019Case report[¹⁸F]FDGIncreased metabolic activity in thoracic aorta and subclavian arteries
Matsui et al.³⁷2021Case report[¹⁸F]FDGUptake in aorta, bilateral carotid, iliac arteries, and celiac artery
Hafner et al.³⁸2021Case report[¹⁸F]FDGMultiple liver abscesses and abdominal aortitis
Na et al.³⁹2024Case report[¹⁸F]FDGUptake in subclavian arteries, common carotids, aortic arch, thoracic aorta, and coronary
Lu et al.⁴⁰2024Case report[¹⁸F]FDGUptake in right head/arm vessels, left carotid, and left subclavian artery

Table 6. Cold Agglutinin Disease & Churg–Strauss Syndrome

Disease: Cold Agglutinin Disease

AuthorsYearTypePET/CTFindings
Nakamoto et al.⁴¹2019Case report[¹⁸F]FDGSplenomegaly with diffuse bone marrow uptake
Hayashi et al.⁴²2023Case report[¹⁸F]FDGUptake in vertebral body, iliac bone, and spleen

Disease: Churg–Strauss Syndrome

AuthorsYearTypePET/CTFindings
Horiguchi et al.⁴³2014Case report[¹⁸F]FDGUptake in mediastinal and hilar lymphadenopathy

Table 7. Eosinophilic Fasciitis

Disease: Eosinophilic fasciitis

AuthorsYearTypePET/CTFindings
Narváez et al.⁴⁴2019Case report[¹⁸F]FDGDiffuse symmetrical uptake in fascia of legs and thighs
Barlet et al.⁴⁵2020Case report[¹⁸F]FDGUptake in shoulders, wrists, knees, and ankles
Song et al.⁴⁶2021Case report[¹⁸F]FDGUptake in subcutaneous fat and muscle
Chalopin et al.⁴⁷2021Case report[¹⁸F]FDGUptake in bone lesions
Barlet et al.⁴⁵2021Case report[¹⁸F]FDGDiffuse uptake of muscular fasciae
Laria et al.⁴⁸2022Case report[¹⁸F]FDGDiffuse uptake in forearm muscles and both lower limbs
Amrane et al.⁴⁹2022Case report[¹⁸F]FDGUptake in subcutaneous nodules, fascia, and synovial walls of knees
Benzaquen et al.⁵⁰2023Case report[¹⁸F]FDGGeneralized hypermetabolism of fasciae and adjacent tissues
Fevrier et al.⁵¹2024Case report[¹⁸F]FDGUptake of fasciae in upper and lower limbs

Table 8. Henoch–Schönlein Purpura & Immune Thrombocytopenic Purpura

Disease: Henoch–Schönlein Purpura

AuthorsYearTypePET/CTFindings
Sabzevari et al.⁵²2018Case report[¹⁸F]FDGUptake in subclavian, brachiocephalic, abdominal aortic, iliac, and femoral arteries
Gultekin et al.⁵³2021Case report[¹⁸F]FDGUptake in cavitary nodular lesions and hilar lymphadenomegaly

Disease: Immune Thrombocytopenic Purpura

AuthorsYearTypePET/CTFindings
Razanamahery et al.⁵⁴2021Case report[¹⁸F]FDGUptake in perinephric fat fibrosis, mediastinal lymph nodes, and low uptake in testis
Ren et al.⁵⁵2023Case report[¹⁸F]FDGUptake in lymph nodes in numerous regions

Table 9. Neuromyelitis Optica Spectrum Disorder

Disease: Neuromyelitis Optica Spectrum Disorder

AuthorsYearTypePET/CTFindings
Alkhaja et al.⁵⁶2021Case report[¹⁸F]FDGUptake along entire spinal cord suggesting acute myelitis
Ding et al.⁵⁷2021Case report[¹⁸F]FDGUptake in cervicothoracic region and rectal wall
Fujisawa et al.⁵⁸2023Case report[¹⁸F]Flutemetamol, [¹⁸F]MK6240 (TAU), [¹⁸F]FDGBrain uptake patterns (frontal, parietal, temporal, cingulate); decreased glucose metabolism in specific cortical regions
Vlaicu et al.⁵⁹2023Case report[¹⁸F]FDGUptake in pulmonary neoplasm with lymph node and adrenal metastases

Table 10. Paraneoplastic Pemphigus

Disease: Paraneoplastic pemphigus

AuthorsYearTypePET/CTFindings
Dhull et al.⁶⁰2016Case report[¹⁸F]FDGUptake in left paravertebral region, renal hilum, oral cavity, and lung
Lim et al.⁶¹2017Case report[¹⁸F]FDGUptake in multiple enlarged lymph nodes
Khurana et al.⁶²2020Case report[¹⁸F]FDGUptake in mediastinal lesion extending to pericardial sinus
Chen et al.⁶³2020Case report[¹⁸F]FDGUptake in mediastinum, parasternal adenopathy, pleural effusion
Liska et al.⁶⁴2022Case report[¹⁸F]FDGUptake in left tonsil
Daniels et al.⁶⁵2023Case report[¹⁸F]FDGUptake in mediastinum
Lu et al.⁶⁶2024Case report[¹⁸F]FDGUptake in neck lymphadenopathies

Table 11. Paraneoplastic Pemphigus AND Castleman’s Disease & Paraneoplastic Cerebellar Degeneration

Disease: Paraneoplastic pemphigus AND Castleman’s disease

AuthorsYearTypePET/CTFindings
Fu et al.⁶⁷2018Case report[¹⁸F]FDGUptake in oral lesions and heterogeneous soft tissue mass in retroperitoneum
Liu et al.⁶⁸2011Case series[¹⁸F]FDGUptake in head of pancreas
Fu et al.⁶⁹2018Case report[¹⁸F]FDGUptake in retroperitoneum
Wang et al.⁷⁰2019Case report[¹⁸F]FDGUptake in head of pancreas
Relvas et al.⁷¹2023Case report[¹⁸F]FDGUptake in retroperitoneal lymphadenopathies and lobulated mass

Disease: Paraneoplastic Cerebellar Degeneration

AuthorsYearTypePET/CTFindings
Rodríguez Herrera et al.⁷²2023Case report[¹⁸F]FDGUptake in orbitofrontal hypermetabolism, mesial temporal, and bilateral regions
AuthorsYearType of StudyPET/CT TracerMain Findings
Takahashi et al.⁷³2024Case report[¹⁸F]FDG / [¹²³I]IMP SPECT[¹⁸F]FDG uptake in lung tumor and mediastinal lymph nodes; [¹²³I]IMP SPECT shows normal blood flow in the cerebellum
Kalantari et al.⁷⁴2024Case report[¹⁸F]FDGUptake in the annex
Imai et al.⁷⁵2022Case report[¹⁸F]FDGUptake in the left neck

Table 12. POEMS Syndrome

Disease: POEMS Syndrome

AuthorsYearTypePET/CTFindings
Pan et al.⁷⁶2015Cross-sectional[¹⁸F]FDGUptake in solitary and multiple hypermetabolic bone lesions, lymph nodes, hepatomegaly, splenomegaly, CNS, serous cavity effusion, and gynecomastia
Allam et al.⁷⁷2022Case report[¹⁸F]FDGUptake in axillary and retropectoral lymph nodes and systemic fibrosis involving pleura, mediastinum, and pelvis
Genicon et al.⁷⁸2022Case report[¹⁸F]FDGUptake in osteolytic lesion in right femur
Gültekin et al.⁷⁹2023Case report[¹⁸F]FDGDiffuse muscle uptake
Aderhold et al.⁸⁰2024Case report[¹⁸F]FDGUptake in osteosclerotic pelvic, vertebral, and clavicular bone lesions and hilar lymphadenopathy

Table 13. Polyarteritis Nodosa & Postural Orthostatic Tachycardia Syndrome

Disease: Polyarteritis nodosa

AuthorsYearTypePET/CTFindings
Kang et al.⁸¹2023Case report[¹⁸F]FDGUptake in lower extremities
Taimen et al.⁸²2024Case report[¹⁸F]FDGUptake in peri- and intramuscular arterial structures of lower extremities and liver
Makiyama et al.⁸³2024Case report[¹⁸F]FDGUptake in nodules (right lower lung), pulmonary artery embolism, and subcutaneous tissue
Philip et al.⁸⁴2024Case report[¹⁸F]FDGUptake in soft tissues and intramuscular arterial tree
Taniguchi et al.⁸⁵2024Case report[¹⁸F]FDGUptake in medium-sized vessels

Disease: Postural Orthostatic Tachycardia Syndrome (POTS)

AuthorsYearTypePET/CTFindings
Khan et al.⁸⁶2022Case report[⁶⁸Ga]Ga-DOTA-TATEUptake associated with contrast in both adrenal glands and calcified thyroid nodules

Disease: Scleroderma

AuthorsYearTypePET/CTFindings
Diaz Menindez et al.⁸⁷2023Case report[¹⁸F]FDGUptake in multifocal osseous regions, especially spine and pelvis

Discussion

Autoimmune diseases are characterized by spontaneous hyperactivity of the immune system, leading to the production of additional antibodies, which often results in inflammation that can affect all organs and tissues of the body, especially lymphoid tissues, joints, skin, muscles, salivary glands, blood vessels, and bone marrow⁸⁸.

As established in the results section, multiple autoimmune diseases are considered within the spectrum of orphan diseases. Therefore, from the perspective of molecular diagnostic studies, this review aimed to compile the available findings in the literature so that readers can become familiar with these types of pathologies and find a diagnostic aid for these conditions in these studies.

As for the pathophysiology, inflammation is the host’s initial defense against pathogens and other triggering stimuli. It plays an essential role in tissue repair and eliminating harmful pathogens. However, an inadequate response can damage normal cells adjacent to affected tissue. In many autoimmune diseases, sterile inflammation occurs.

Molecular imaging allows visualization, characterization, and measurement of biological processes at molecular and cellular levels, with PET/CT being the most widely used modality in clinical practice⁸⁹.

The European Association of Nuclear Medicine (EANM), in conjunction with the Society of Nuclear Medicine and Molecular Imaging (SNMMI), published guidelines in 2013 on the use of [¹⁸F]FDG in inflammation and infection. In 2018, along with the PET Interest Group (GIP) and endorsed by the American Society of Nuclear Cardiology, guidelines were published for PET/CT in diagnosing and following up patients with suspected large vessel vasculitis and polymyalgia rheumatica. Over the last 10 years, PET/CT use has rapidly evolved and is now considered the most utilized imaging study in nuclear medicine for diagnosing and treating inflammatory disorders⁹⁰.

[¹⁸F]FDG is the most commonly used PET tracer; as a glucose analog, it is taken up by cells with high energy demand, where it accumulates and allows detection via PET imaging. Inflammatory processes exhibit increased FDG uptake due to glucose transporter expression (GLUT1, GLUT3) and increased metabolic activity in inflammatory cells.

This is supported by the review findings, where increased FDG uptake was the predominant observation across diseases. SUVmax values greater than 4 were reported in Castleman disease, Wegener’s granulomatosis, POEMS syndrome, and eosinophilic fasciitis in some cases.

PET/CT also helped guide diagnosis by identifying primary tumors or metastatic lesions in conditions such as paraneoplastic pemphigus.

Cogan syndrome, a rare disease of unknown origin, often presents with systemic vasculitis. PET/CT facilitated diagnosis by revealing increased metabolic activity in major vessels like the aorta and subclavian arteries.

Some cases showed diagnostic challenges—for example, distinguishing idiopathic multicentric Castleman disease from Hodgkin lymphoma, where FDG uptake patterns differ significantly.

Patients with chronic autoimmune/inflammatory diseases have a higher risk of malignancies. For example:

  • 2–4× risk for esophageal and pancreatic cancer
  • ~2× risk of lymphoma in rheumatoid arthritis
  • 3–6× in systemic lupus erythematosus
  • 9–18× in Sjögren syndrome
  • 7× in dermatomyositis/polymyositis

PET/CT is useful in differentiating inflammation from malignancy using metrics like spleen/liver SUVmax ratio.

In diseases like acromegaly, Chagas disease, and Castleman disease, tracers such as ⁶⁸Ga-DOTATATE/DOTATOC show increased uptake due to somatostatin receptor overexpression.

Other tracers include amino acid–based tracers like ¹¹C-methionine and ¹⁸F-FET, useful for detecting residual or central nervous system lesions.

In neuromyelitis optica, tracers like ¹⁸F-flutemetamol and ¹⁸F-MK6240 (TAU) detect amyloid and tau deposition.

[⁶⁸Ga]-Pentixafor may indicate CXCR4 expression in diseases like Castleman disease.

Overall, PET/CT provides a comprehensive view of systemic inflammation and helps guide diagnosis, treatment, and follow-up in autoimmune orphan diseases.


Conflict of Interest

The authors have no conflicts of interest to declare.


Funding Statement

None.


Acknowledgements

None.

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