Bogdan Małkowski
Nicolaus Copernicus University in Toruń
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Featured researches published by Bogdan Małkowski.
The Journal of Nuclear Medicine | 2013
Alberto Biggi; Andrea Gallamini; Stephane Chauvie; Martin Hutchings; Lale Kostakoglu; Michele Gregianin; Michel Meignan; Bogdan Małkowski; Michael S. Hofman; Sally Barrington
At present, there are no standard criteria that have been validated for interim PET reporting in lymphoma. In 2009, an international workshop attended by hematologists and nuclear medicine experts in Deauville, France, proposed to develop simple and reproducible rules for interim PET reporting in lymphoma. Accordingly, an international validation study was undertaken with the primary aim of validating the prognostic role of interim PET using the Deauville 5-point score to evaluate images and with the secondary aim of measuring concordance rates among reviewers using the same 5-point score. This paper focuses on the criteria for interpretation of interim PET and on concordance rates. Methods: A cohort of advanced-stage Hodgkin lymphoma patients treated with doxorubicin, bleomycin, vinblastine, and dacarbazine (ABVD) were enrolled retrospectively from centers worldwide. Baseline and interim scans were reviewed by an international panel of 6 nuclear medicine experts using the 5-point score. Results: Complete scan datasets of acceptable diagnostic quality were available for 260 of 440 (59%) enrolled patients. Independent agreement among reviewers was reached on 252 of 260 patients (97%), for whom at least 4 reviewers agreed the findings were negative (score of 1–3) or positive (score of 4–5). After discussion, consensus was reached in all cases. There were 45 of 260 patients (17%) with positive interim PET findings and 215 of 260 patients (83%) with negative interim PET findings. Thirty-three interim PET–positive scans were true-positive, and 12 were false-positive. Two hundred three interim PET–negative scans were true-negative, and 12 were false-negative. Sensitivity, specificity, and accuracy were 0.73, 0.94, and 0.91, respectively. Negative predictive value and positive predictive value were 0.94 and 0.73, respectively. The 3-y failure-free survival was 83%, 28%, and 95% for the entire population and for interim PET–positive and –negative patients, respectively (P < 0.0001). The agreement between pairs of reviewers was good or very good, ranging from 0.69 to 0.84 as measured with the Cohen kappa. Overall agreement was good at 0.76 as measured with the Krippendorf α. Conclusion: The 5-point score proposed at Deauville for reviewing interim PET scans in advanced Hodgkin lymphoma is accurate and reproducible enough to be accepted as a standard reporting criterion in clinical practice and for clinical trials.
Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2014
Martin Hutchings; Lale Kostakoglu; Jan Maciej Zaucha; Bogdan Małkowski; Alberto Biggi; Iwona Danielewicz; Annika Loft; Lena Specht; Dominick Lamonica; Myron S. Czuczman; Christina Nanni; Pier Luigi Zinzani; Louis F. Diehl; Richard Stern; Morton Coleman
PURPOSE Negative [(18)F]fluorodeoxyglucose (FDG) -positron emission tomography (PET)/computed tomography (CT) after two cycles of chemotherapy indicates a favorable prognosis in Hodgkin lymphoma (HL). We hypothesized that the negative predictive value would be even higher in patients responding rapidly enough to be PET negative after one cycle. This prospective study aimed to assess the prognostic value of PET after one cycle of chemotherapy in HL and to assess the dynamics of FDG uptake after one cycle (PET1) and after two cycles (PET2). PATIENTS AND METHODS All PET scans were read by two blinded, independent reviewers in different countries, according to the Deauville five-point scale. The main end point was progression-free survival (PFS) after 2 years. RESULTS A total of 126 patients were included, and all had PET1; 89 patients had both PET1 and PET2. The prognostic value of PET1 was statistically significant with respect to both PFS and overall survival. Two-year PFS for PET1-negative and PET1-positive patients was 94.1% and 40.8%, respectively. Among those with both PET1 and PET2, 2-year PFS was 98.3% and 38.5% for PET1-negative and PET1-positive patients and 90.2% and 23.1% for PET2-negative and PET2-positive patients, respectively. No PET1-negative patient was PET2 positive. CONCLUSION PET after one cycle of chemotherapy is highly prognostic in HL. No other prognostic tool identifies a group of patients with HL with a more favorable outcome than those patients with a negative PET1. In the absence of precise pretherapeutic predictive markers, PET1 is the best method for response-adapted strategies designed to select patients for less intensive treatment.
Gastroenterology Research and Practice | 2013
Bogdan Małkowski; Tomasz Staniuk; Ewa Śrutek; Tomasz Gorycki; Wojciech Zegarski; Michał Studniarek
The aim of the study was to evaluate the usefulness of 18F-FLT PET/CT in the detection and differentiation of gastric cancers (GC). 104 consecutive patients (57 cases of adenocarcinoma tubulare (G2 and G3), 17 cases of mucinous adenocarcinoma, 6 cases of undifferentiated carcinoma, 14 cases of adenocarcinoma partim mucocellulare, and 10 cases of end stage gastric cancer) with newly diagnosed advanced gastric cancer were examined with FLT PET/CT. For quantitative and comparative analyses, the maximal standardized uptake value (SUVmax) was calculated for both the tumors and noninvaded gastric wall. Results. There were found, in the group of adenocarcinoma tubulare, SUVmax 1.5–23.1 (7.46 ± 4.57), in mucinous adenocarcinoma, SUVmax 2.3–10.3 (5.5 ± 2.4), in undifferentiated carcinoma, SUVmax 3.1–13.6 (7.28 ± 3.25), in adenocarcinoma partim mucocellulare, SUVmax 2–25.3 (7.7 ± 6.99), and, in normal gastric wall, SUVmax 1.01–2.55 (1.84 ± 0.35). For the level of 2.6 cut-off value between the normal wall and neoplasm FLT uptake from ROC analysis, all but five gastric cancers showed higher accumulation of FLT than noninfiltrated mucosa. Conclusion. Gastric cancer presents higher accumulation of 18F-FLT than normal, distended gastric mucosa. Significantly higher accumulation was shown in cancers better differentiated and with higher cellular density.
The Journal of Nuclear Medicine | 2017
Colette Zwarthoed; Tarec Christoffer El-Galaly; Maria Canepari; Matthieu John Ouvrier; Julien Viotti; Marc Ettaiche; Simonetta Viviani; Luigi Rigacci; Livio Trentin; Chiara Rusconi; Stefano Luminari; Maria Cantonetti; Silvia Bolis; Anna Borra; Jacques Darcourt; Flavia Salvi; Edyta Subocz; Joanna Tajer; Waldemar Kulikowski; Bogdan Małkowski; Jan Maciej Zaucha; Andrea Gallamini
PET/CT-ascertained bone marrow involvement (BMI) constitutes the single most important reason for upstaging by PET/CT in Hodgkin lymphoma (HL). However, BMI assessment in PET/CT can be challenging. This study analyzed the clinicopathologic correlations and prognostic meaning of different patterns of bone marrow (BM) 18F-FDG uptake in HL. Methods: One hundred eighty newly diagnosed early unfavorable and advanced-stage HL patients, all scanned at baseline and after 2 adriamycin-bleomycin-vinblastine-dacarbazine (ABVD) courses with 18F-FDG PET, enrolled in 2 international studies aimed at assessing the role of interim PET scanning in HL, were retrospectively included. Patients were treated with ABVD × 4–6 cycles and involved-field radiation when needed, and no treatment adaptation on interim PET scanning was allowed. Two masked reviewers independently reported the scans. Results: Thirty-eight patients (21.1%) had focal lesions (fPET+), 10 of them with a single (unifocal) and 28 with multiple (multifocal) BM lesions. Fifty-three patients (29.4%) had pure strong (>liver) diffuse uptake (dPET+) and 89 (48.4%) showed no or faint (≤liver) BM uptake (nPET+). BM biopsy was positive in 6 of 38 patients (15.7%) for fPET+, in 1 of 53 (1.9%) for dPET+, and in 5 of 89 (5.6%) for nPET+. dPET+ was correlated with younger age, higher frequency of bulky disease, lower hemoglobin levels, higher leukocyte counts, and similar diffuse uptake in the spleen. Patients with pure dPET+ had a 3-y progression-free survival identical to patients without any 18F-FDG uptake (82.9% and 82.2%, respectively, P = 0.918). However, patients with fPET+ (either unifocal or multifocal) had a 3-y progression-free survival significantly inferior to patients with dPET+ and nPET+ (66.7% and 82.5%, respectively, P = 0.03). The κ values for interobserver agreement were 0.84 for focal uptake and 0.78 for diffuse uptake. Conclusion: We confirmed that 18F-FDG PET scanning is a reliable tool for BMI assessment in HL, and BM biopsy is no longer needed for routine staging. Moreover, the interobserver agreement for BMI in this study proved excellent and only focal 18F-FDG BM uptake should be considered as a harbinger of HL.
PLOS ONE | 2016
Regine Kluge; Lidia Chavdarova; Martha Hoffmann; Carsten Kobe; Bogdan Małkowski; Françoise Montravers; Lars Kurch; Thomas Georgi; Markus Dietlein; W. Hamish B. Wallace; Jonas Karlen; Ana Álvarez Fernández-Teijeiro; Michaela Cepelova; Lorrain Wilson; Eva Bergstraesser; Osama Sabri; Christine Mauz-Körholz; Dieter Körholz; Dirk Hasenclever
Purpose The five point Deauville (D) scale is widely used to assess interim PET metabolic response to chemotherapy in Hodgkin lymphoma (HL) patients. An International Validation Study reported good concordance among reviewers in ABVD treated advanced stage HL patients for the binary discrimination between score D1,2,3 and score D4,5. Inter-reader reliability of the whole scale is not well characterised. Methods Five international expert readers scored 100 interim PET/CT scans from paediatric HL patients. Scans were acquired in 51 European hospitals after two courses of OEPA chemotherapy (according to the EuroNet-PHL-C1 study). Images were interpreted in direct comparison with staging PET/CTs. Results The probability that two random readers concord on the five point D score of a random case is only 42% (global kappa = 0.24). Aggregating to a three point scale D1,2 vs. D3 vs. D4,5 improves concordance to 60% (kappa = 0.34). Concordance if one of two readers assigns a given score is 70% for score D1,2 only 36% for score D3 and 64% for D4,5. Concordance for the binary decisions D1,2 vs. D3,4,5 is 67% and 86% for D1,2,3 vs D4,5 (kappa = 0.36 resp. 0.56). If one reader assigns D1,2,3 concordance probability is 92%, but only 64% if D4,5 is called. Discrepancies occur mainly in mediastinum, neck and skeleton. Conclusion Inter-reader reliability of the five point D-scale is poor in this interobserver analysis of paediatric patients who underwent OEPA. Inter-reader variability is maximal in cases assigned to D2 or D3. The binary distinction D1,2,3 versus D4,5 is the most reliable criterion for clinical decision making.
Leukemia & Lymphoma | 2015
Ewa Bednaruk-Młyński; Joanna Pienkowska; Adam Skórzak; Bogdan Małkowski; Waldemar Kulikowski; Edyta Subocz; Justyna Dzietczenia; Marta Zalewska; Krzysztof Leśniewski-Kmak; Renata Zaucha; Tomasz Wróbel; Jan Maciej Zaucha
Abstract We compared initial computed tomography (CT) and positron emission tomography (PET)/CT in 96 patients with Hodgkin lymphoma (HL), assessing the role of baseline PET/CT in stage migration and treatment selection. The number of patients with stage I, II, III and IV disease based on CT versus PET/CT was: 5 vs. 7, 49 vs. 37, 28 vs. 22 and 14 vs. 30, respectively. In 33 (34%) patients, PET/CT changed HL stage: 27 (28%) were upstaged and six (6.3%) downstaged. Upstaging was caused by detection of new extranodal involvements (47 sites in 26 patients): bone marrow (10 patients), spleen (five patients) and lung (two patients). In nine patients ≥ 2 further coexisting locations were detected. Downstaging resulted from the absence of fluorodeoxyglucose (18F-FDG) uptake in enlarged nodes (> 15 mm) in the abdomen and pelvis. PET/CT modified HL stage in 34% of patients leading to treatment modification in the majority. Our results indicate that PET/CT should be mandatory in the initial staging of HL.
Wspolczesna Onkologia-Contemporary Oncology | 2013
Tomasz Staniuk; Wojciech Zegarski; Bogdan Małkowski; Michał Jankowski; Michał Klag; Tomasz Pietrzak
Aim of the study Evaluation of FLT/PET/ CT usefulness in diagnosis and qualification for surgical treatment of gastric cancer. Material and methods The FLT/PET/CT test was carried out in a group of 50 gastric cancer patients. Based on the test result, a decision followed about the therapeutic procedure to be applied. A comparison was made with regards to the consistency of the cancer growth advancement degree evaluation in the initial preoperative FLT/PET/CT test against the evaluation of postoperative degree of cancer advancement in histopathology. Results In the group of 50 diagnosed patients a surgical treatment was used for 37 patients. 21 resections were performed out of which 19 operations were radical In the group of 16 non-resective operations 2 post-laparotomic patients were selected for inductive treatment. In the group of 13 patients who did not undergo any surgery, 10 were directed to palliative care and 3 for inductive treatment. In the group of 50 patients, the applied FLT-PET/CT test confirmed presence of primary tumor in 49 patients. The presence of increased uptake of FLT in the local lymph nodes during the preoperative FLT-PET/CT test was confirmed in 22 cases. In 14 patients with FLT-PET/Ct N(+) with the M(–) feature resection surgery was performed. The increased uptake of FLT in localizing metastases (nodal and non-nodal) FLT-PET/CT (M+) was detected in 22 patients. The presence of nodal metastases in the postoperative histopathology examination (hpN+) was detected in 14 cases. In these cases preoperative FLT-PET/CT test proved the N(+) feature in 11 patients. The result FLT-PET/CT N(–) was truly negative in 2 patients, and false negative in 1 patient. In the group of 7 operated hpN(–) patients, in 3 patients a preoperative result FLT-PET/ CT N(+) (false positive result) was obtained. The consistency (positive) of nodal metastases identification in FLT-PET/CT as compared to post-surgical histopathology examination scored 11/15, which equals 73.3%. In the group of patients in whom resection surgery was performed, 4 false negative results were obtained [hp(N+), FLT-PET/CT (N–)] and 3 false positive results [hp(N–), FLT-PET/CT N(+)]. Conclusions The initial test results indicate that FLT-PET/CT is an effective method in evaluating the primary tumor and the regional lymph nodes and is useful and beneficial in the diagnosis and further treatment evaluation of gastric cancer. FLT-PET/CT examination facilitates making proper therapeutic decisions – it allows the number of unnecessary laparotomies to be lowered.
Radiotherapy and Oncology | 2016
Maciej Harat; Bogdan Małkowski; Roman Makarewicz
BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE The diagnostic accuracy of magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) for glioblastoma multiforme (GBM) is suboptimal. We analysed pre-treatment MRI- and dual time-point 18F-fluoroethylthyrosine-PET (FET-PET)-based target volumes and GBM recurrence patterns following radiotherapy with temozolomide. MATERIALS AND METHODS Thirty-four patients with primary GBM were treated according to MRI-based treatment volumes (GTVRM). Patients underwent dual time-point FET-PET scans prior to treatment, and biological tumour volumes (GTVPET) were contoured but not used for target definition. Progressions were classified based on location of primary GTVs. Volume and uniformity of MRI- vs. FET-PET/CT-derived GTVs and progression patterns assessed by MRI were analysed. RESULTS FET-based GTVs measured 10min after radionuclide injection (a.r.i.; median 37.3cm(3)) were larger than GTVs measured 60min a.r.i. (median 27.7cm(3)). GTVPET volumes were significantly larger than corresponding MRI-based GTVs. MRI and PET concordance for the identification of glioblastoma GTVs was poor (mean uniformity index 0.4). 74% of failures were inside primary GTVPET volumes, with no solitary progressions inside the MRI-defined margin +20mm but outside the GTVPET detected. CONCLUSIONS The size and geometry of GTVs differed in the majority of patients. The GTVPET volume depends on time after radionuclide injection. FET-PET better defined failure site than MRI alone.
PLOS ONE | 2015
Bogdan Małkowski; Maciej Harat; Agnieszka Zyromska; Tomasz Wisniewski; Aleksandra Harat; Rita Lopatto; Jacek Furtak
Gliomas are common brain tumours, but obtaining tissue for definitive diagnosis can be difficult. There is, therefore, interest in the use of non-invasive methods to diagnose and grade the disease. Although positron emission tomography (PET) with 18F-fluorethyltyrosine (18F-FET) can be used to differentiate between low-grade (LGG) and high-grade (HGG) gliomas, the optimal parameters to measure and their cut-points have yet to be established. We therefore assessed the value of single and dual time-point acquisition of 18F-FET PET parameters to differentiate between primary LGGs (n = 22) and HGGs (n = 24). PET examination was considered positive for glioma if the metabolic activity was 1.6-times higher than that of background (contralateral) brain, and maximum tissue-brain ratios (TBRmax) were calculated 10 and 60 min after isotope administration with their sums and differences calculated from individual time-point values. Using a threshold-based method, the overall sensitivity of PET was 97%. Several analysed parameters were significantly different between LGGs and HGGs. However, in a receiver operating characteristics analysis, TBR sum had the best diagnostic accuracy of 87% and sensitivity, specificity, and positive and negative predictive values of 100%, 72.7%, 80%, and 100%, respectively. 18F-FET PET is valuable for the non-invasive determination of glioma grade, especially when dual time-point metrics are used. TBR sum shows the greatest accuracy, sensitivity, and negative predictive value for tumour grade differentiation and is a simple method to implement. However, the cut-off may differ between institutions and calibration strategies would be useful.
Hematological Oncology | 2017
Luca Ceriani; Sally Barrington; Alberto Biggi; Bogdan Małkowski; Ur Metser; Annibale Versari; Maurizio Martelli; Andrew Davies; Peter Johnson; Emanuele Zucca; Stephane Chauvie
The International Extranodal Lymphoma Study Group (IELSG)‐37 is a prospective randomized trial assessing the role of consolidation mediastinal radiotherapy after immunochemotherapy to patients with newly diagnosed primary mediastinal large B‐cell lymphoma (PMBCL). It is a positron emission tomography (PET) response‐guided study where patients obtaining a complete metabolic response on an end‐of‐therapy PET‐computed tomography (CT) scan evaluated by a central review are randomized to receive radiotherapy or no further treatment.