POSITRON-EMISSION TOMOGRAPHY (PET)--A NEW DIAGNOSTIC METHOD. PHYSICAL AND TECHNICAL REQUIREMENTS

Authors

  • G.E. Nurmetova Author
  • A. Zokirov Author

Keywords:

Key words: (18)F-FDG; PET/CT; PET/MRI; positron emission tomography, annihilyatsiya

Abstract

Positron emission tomography (PET) is an important modality in the field of molecular imaging, which is gradually impacting patient care by providing safe, fast, and reliable techniques that help to alter the course of patient care by revealing invasive, de facto procedures to be unnecessary or rendering them obsolete. Also, PET provides a key connection between the molecular mechanisms involved in the pathophysiology of disease and the according targeted therapies. Recently, PET imaging is also gaining ground in the field of drug delivery. Current drug delivery research is focused on developing novel drug delivery systems with emphasis on precise targeting, accurate dose delivery, and minimal toxicity in order to achieve maximum therapeutic efficacy. At the intersection between PET imaging and controlled drug delivery, interest has grown in combining both these paradigms into clinically effective formulations. PET image-guided drug delivery has great potential to revolutionize patient care by in vivo assessment of drug biodistribution and accumulation at the target site and real-time monitoring of the therapeutic outcome. The expected end point of this approach is to provide fundamental support for the optimization of innovative diagnostic and therapeutic strategies that could contribute to emerging concepts in the field of “personalized medicine”. This review focuses on the recent developments in PET image-guided drug delivery and discusses intriguing opportunities for future development. The preclinical data reported to date are quite promising, and it is evident that such strategies in cancer management hold promise for clinically translatable advances that can positively impact the overall diagnostic and therapeutic processes and result in enhanced quality of life for cancer patients.

References

1. Cherry, S. R., Sorenson, J. A., & Phelps, M. E. (2012). Physics in Nuclear Medicine. Elsevier Health Sciences.

2. Wahl, R. L. (2002). Principles and applications of positron emission tomography. Journal of Clinical Oncology, 20(7), 1699-1712.

3. Bailey, D. L., Townsend, D. W., Valk, P. E., & Maisey, M. N. (2005). Positron Emission Tomography: Basic Sciences. Springer Science & Business Media.

4. Rahmim, A., & Zaidi, H. (2008). PET versus SPECT: strengths, limitations and challenges. Nuclear Medicine Communications, 29(3), 193-207.

5. Vandenberghe, S., Moskal, P., & Karp, J. S. (2020). State of the art in total body PET. EJNMMI Physics, 7(1), 1-21.

Published

2024-12-17

How to Cite

G.E. Nurmetova, & A. Zokirov. (2024). POSITRON-EMISSION TOMOGRAPHY (PET)--A NEW DIAGNOSTIC METHOD. PHYSICAL AND TECHNICAL REQUIREMENTS. World Scientific Research Journal, 34(1), 193-201. https://scientific-jl.org/wsrj/article/view/6130