Funmilayo Tade
Emory University
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Featured researches published by Funmilayo Tade.
The Journal of Urology | 2017
Tore Bach-Gansmo; Cristina Nanni; Lucia Zanoni; Tronde Velde Bogsrud; Heidi Sletten; Katrine Andersen Korsan; Jesse Kieboom; Funmilayo Tade; Oluwaseun Odewole; Albert Chau; Penelope Ward; Mark M. Goodman; Stefano Fanti; David M. Schuster; Frode Willoch
Purpose: Sensitive detection of cancer foci in men experiencing biochemical recurrence following initial treatment of prostate cancer is of great clinical significance with a possible impact on subsequent treatment choice. We describe a multisite experience of the efficacy and safety of the positron emission tomography/computerized tomography agent fluciclovine (18F) after biochemical recurrence. Materials and Methods: A total of 596 patients underwent fluciclovine (18F) positron emission tomography/computerized tomography at 4 clinical sites. Detection rate determinations were stratified by the baseline prostate specific antigen value. Diagnostic performance was assessed against a histological reference standard in 143 scans. Results: The subject level fluciclovine (18F) positron emission tomography/computer tomography detection rate was 67.7% (403 of 595 scans). Positive findings were detected in the prostate/bed and pelvic lymph node regions in 38.7% (232 of 599) and 32.6% of scans (194 of 596), respectively. Metastatic involvement outside the pelvis was detected in 26.2% of scans (155 of 591). The subject level detection rate in patients in the lowest quartile for baseline prostate specific antigen (0.79 ng/ml or less) was 41.4% (53 of 128). Of these patients 13 had involvement in the prostate/bed only, 16 had pelvic lymph node involvement without distant disease and 24 had distant metastases. The positive predictive value of fluciclovine (18F) positron emission tomography/computerized tomography scanning for all sampled lesions was 62.2%, and it was 92.3% and 71.8% for extraprostatic and prostate/bed involvement, respectively. Fluciclovine (18F) was well tolerated and the safety profile was not altered following repeat administration. Conclusions: Fluciclovine (18F) is well tolerated and able to detect local and distant prostate cancer recurrence across a wide range of prostate specific antigen values.
The Journal of Nuclear Medicine | 2016
Funmilayo Tade; Michael A. Cohen; Toncred M. Styblo; Oluwaseun Odewole; Anna I. Holbrook; Mary S. Newell; Bital Savir-Baruch; Xiaoxian B. Li; Mark M. Goodman; Jonathon A. Nye; David M. Schuster
The purpose of this study was to explore the uptake of the synthetic amino acid analog PET radiotracer anti-3-18F-FACBC (18F-fluciclovine) in breast lesions with correlation to histologic and immunohistochemical characteristics. Methods: Twelve women with breast lesions underwent 45-min dynamic PET/CT of the thorax after intravenous administration of 366.3 ± 14.8 (337.44–394.05) MBq of 18F-fluciclovine. Uptake in the primary lesions at 4 representative time points (5, 17, 29, and 41 min) after injection were correlated with histologic, imaging, and clinical findings. The significance of differences in SUVmax and tumor-to-background ratios between malignant and benign tissue were calculated. Correlations of activity to histologic and immunohistochemical cancer subtypes were made including Ki-67 intensity and Nottingham grade (NG). Results: There were 17 breast lesions (4 benign, 13 malignant) including 7 of 13 invasive ductal, 5 of 13 invasive lobular, and 1 of 13 metaplastic carcinomas. There was a significant difference in mean SUVmax ± SD of malignant (6.2 ± 3.2, 6.0 ± 3.2, 5.7 ± 2.8, and 5.6 ± 3.0) versus benign (1.3 ± 0.6, 1.2 ± 0.5, 1.2 ± 0.6, and 1.1 ± 0.5) lesions at 5, 17, 29, and 41 min, respectively (all P ≤ 0.0001). Tumor-to-background (aorta, normal breast, and marrow) ratios were also significantly higher in malignant than benign breast lesions (all P ≤ 0.02). The highest 18F-fluciclovine activity seems to be present in triple-negative and NG3 subtypes. Across time points, quantitative Ki-67 had weak positive correlation with SUVmax (R1 = 0.48 [P = 0.03], R2 = 0.44 [P = 0.03], R3 = 0.46 [P = 0.03], R4 = 0.43 [0.06]). In 7 patients, 18F-fluciclovine PET visualized locoregional and distant spread including that of lobular cancer, though identification of hepatic metastases was limited by physiologic background activity. Conclusion: The uptake characteristics of 18F-fluciclovine are reflective of the histologic and immunohistochemical characteristics in suspected breast lesions with greater activity in malignant versus benign etiology. The data from this exploratory study may be useful to design future studies using 18F-fluciclovine PET for breast tumor imaging as well as for detection of locoregional and distant spread.
Clinical Nuclear Medicine | 2017
Oladunni Akin-Akintayo; Ashesh B. Jani; Oluwaseun Odewole; Funmilayo Tade; Viraj A. Master; Leah M. Bellamy; Raghuveer Halkar; Chao Zhang; Zhengjia Chen; Mark M. Goodman; David M. Schuster
Purpose We explored the influence of FACBC (fluciclovine) PET/CT on the decision to offer radiotherapy and radiotherapy treatment field recommendations in postprostatectomy patients with recurrent prostate cancer. Patients and Methods After obtaining institutional review board approval and informed consent, 87 patients with detectable prostate-specific antigen (PSA) levels were recruited into a prospective clinical trial. After an initial provider-determined radiotherapy plan based on conventional imaging, 44 of 87 patients were randomized to additionally undergo fluciclovine PET/CT. Pre- and post-fluciclovine radiotherapy decisions were compared and changes were noted. Statistical significance of these decision changes was determined. Results Two of 44 patients in the experimental arm dropped out before fluciclovine scanning. Thirty-four (81.0%) of 42 had positive results on fluciclovine. Overall radiotherapy decision was changed in 17 (40.5%) of 42. Mean PSA, original Gleason score, and prostatectomy-PET interval did not differ significantly between patients with and without radiotherapy decision changes. Two (4.8%) of 42 had the decision for radiotherapy withdrawn due to positive extrapelvic findings. Radiotherapy field decision was changed in 15 (35.7%) of 42. Eleven (73.3%) of 15 had fields changed from prostate bed only to both prostate bed and pelvis, while 4 (26.7%) of 15 had fields changed from both prostate bed and pelvis to prostate bed only. Changes in overall radiotherapy decision and field were statistically significant (P < 0.0001). However, the change in the decision to offer radiotherapy or not was not statistically significant (P = 0.15). Conclusions Fluciclovine PET/CT significantly changed radiotherapy management decisions in postprostatectomy patients with recurrent prostate cancer. Further work in determining differences in PSA-free survival is ongoing.
Proceedings of SPIE | 2017
Ling Ma; Rongrong Guo; Guoyi Zhang; Funmilayo Tade; David M. Schuster; Viraj A. Master; Baowei Fei
Automatic segmentation of the prostate on CT images has many applications in prostate cancer diagnosis and therapy. However, prostate CT image segmentation is challenging because of the low contrast of soft tissue on CT images. In this paper, we propose an automatic segmentation method by combining a deep learning method and multi-atlas refinement. First, instead of segmenting the whole image, we extract the region of interesting (ROI) to delete irrelevant regions. Then, we use the convolutional neural networks (CNN) to learn the deep features for distinguishing the prostate pixels from the non-prostate pixels in order to obtain the preliminary segmentation results. CNN can automatically learn the deep features adapting to the data, which are different from some handcrafted features. Finally, we select some similar atlases to refine the initial segmentation results. The proposed method has been evaluated on a dataset of 92 prostate CT images. Experimental results show that our method achieved a Dice similarity coefficient of 86.80% as compared to the manual segmentation. The deep learning based method can provide a useful tool for automatic segmentation of the prostate on CT images and thus can have a variety of clinical applications.
Clinical Nuclear Medicine | 2018
Harkanwar S. Gill; Funmilayo Tade; David T. Greenwald; Paul M. Yonover; Bital Savir-Baruch
Prostate imaging with F-labeled 1-amino-3-fluorocyclobutane-1-carboxylic acid (FACBC, F-fluciclovine) PET/CT scan (Axumin) was recently approved by the US Food and Drug Administration for men with suspected prostate cancer recurrence based on elevated blood prostate-specific antigen levels following prior treatment. We present a rare case of a 77-year-old man with suspected recurrent prostate cancer with an incidental finding of advanced-stage breast cancer showing different degrees of F-fluciclovine uptake.
Proceedings of SPIE | 2016
Ling Ma; Rongrong Guo; Zhiqiang Tian; Rajesh Venkataraman; Saradwata Sarkar; Xiabi Liu; Funmilayo Tade; David M. Schuster; Baowei Fei
Prostate segmentation on CT images is a challenging task. In this paper, we explore the population and patient-specific characteristics for the segmentation of the prostate on CT images. Because population learning does not consider the inter-patient variations and because patient-specific learning may not perform well for different patients, we are combining the population and patient-specific information to improve segmentation performance. Specifically, we train a population model based on the population data and train a patient-specific model based on the manual segmentation on three slice of the new patient. We compute the similarity between the two models to explore the influence of applicable population knowledge on the specific patient. By combining the patient-specific knowledge with the influence, we can capture the population and patient-specific characteristics to calculate the probability of a pixel belonging to the prostate. Finally, we smooth the prostate surface according to the prostate-density value of the pixels in the distance transform image. We conducted the leave-one-out validation experiments on a set of CT volumes from 15 patients. Manual segmentation results from a radiologist serve as the gold standard for the evaluation. Experimental results show that our method achieved an average DSC of 85.1% as compared to the manual segmentation gold standard. This method outperformed the population learning method and the patient-specific learning approach alone. The CT segmentation method can have various applications in prostate cancer diagnosis and therapy.
European Journal of Radiology | 2018
Oladunni Akin-Akintayo; Funmilayo Tade; Pardeep K. Mittal; Courtney C. Moreno; Peter J. Rossi; Dattatraya Patil; Raghuveer Halkar; Baowei Fei; Viraj A. Master; Ashesh B. Jani; Hiroumi D. Kitajima; Adeboye O. Osunkoya; Claudia Ormenisan-Gherasim; Mark M. Goodman; David M. Schuster
PURPOSE To investigate the disease detection rate, diagnostic performance and interobserver agreement of fluciclovine (18F) PET-CT and multiparametric magnetic resonance imaging (mpMR) in recurrent prostate cancer. METHODS Twenty-four patients with biochemical failure after non-prostatectomy definitive therapy, 16/24 of whom had undergone brachytherapy, underwent fluciclovine PET-CT and mpMR with interpretation by expert readers blinded to patient history, PSA and other imaging results. Reference standard was established via a multidisciplinary truth panel utilizing histology and clinical follow-up (22.9 ± 10.5 months) and emphasizing biochemical control. The truth panel was blinded to investigative imaging results. Diagnostic performance and interobserver agreement (kappa) for the prostate and extraprostatic regions were calculated for each of 2 readers for PET-CT (P1 and P2) and 2 different readers for mpMR (M1 and M2). RESULTS On a whole body basis, the detection rate for fluciclovine PET-CT was 94.7% (both readers), while it ranged from 31.6-36.8% for mpMR. Kappa for fluciclovine PET-CT was 0.90 in the prostate and 1.0 in the extraprostatic regions. For mpMR, kappa was 0.25 and 0.74, respectively. In the prostate, 22/24 patients met the reference standard with 13 malignant and 9 benign results. Sensitivity, specificity and positive predictive value (PPV) were 100.0%, 11.1% and 61.9%, respectively for both PET readers. For mpMR readers, values ranged from 15.4-38.5% for sensitivity, 55.6-77.8% for specificity and 50.0-55.6% for PPV. For extraprostatic disease determination, 18/24 patients met the reference standard. Sensitivity, specificity and PPV were 87.5%, 90.0% and 87.5%, respectively, for fluciclovine PET-CT, while for mpMR, sensitivity ranged from 50 to 75%, specificity 70-80% and PPV 57-75%. CONCLUSION The disease detection rate for fluciclovine PET-CT in non-prostatectomy patients with biochemical failure was 94.7% versus 31.6-36.8% for mpMR. For extraprostatic disease detection, fluciclovine PET-CT had overall better diagnostic performance than mpMR. For the treated prostate, fluciclovine PET-CT had high sensitivity though low specificity for disease detection, while mpMR had higher specificity, though low sensitivity. Interobserver agreement was also higher with fluciclovine PET-CT compared with mpMR.
European Journal of Nuclear Medicine and Molecular Imaging | 2016
Oluwaseun Odewole; Funmilayo Tade; Bital Savir-Baruch; Ashesh B. Jani; Viraj A. Master; Peter J. Rossi; Raghuveer Halkar; Adeboye O. Osunkoya; Oladunni Akin-Akintayo; Chao Zhang; Zhengjia Chen; Mark M. Goodman; David M. Schuster
The Journal of Urology | 2017
Oladunni Akin-Akintayo; Funmilayo Tade; Pardeep K. Mittal; Courtney C. Moreno; Peter J. Rossi; Halkar Raghuveer; Baowei Fei; Mark M. Goodman; David M. Schuster
Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2017
Lucia Zanoni; Christina Nanni; Tore Bach-Gansmo; Trond Velde Bogsrud; Jesse Kieboom; Katrine Andersen Korsan; Heidi Sletten; Funmilayo Tade; Oluwaseun Odewole; Penny Ward; Albert Chau; Mark M. Goodman; Stefano Fanti; David M. Schuster; Frode Willoch