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High and typical 18F-FDG bowel uptake in patients treated with metformin

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European Journal of Nuclear Medicine and Molecular Imaging Aims and scope Submit manuscript

Abstract

Purpose

This prospective and bi-centric study was conducted in order to determine the impact of antidiabetic treatments (AD) on 18F-FDG bowel uptake in type 2 diabetic patients.

Methods

Fifty-five patients with previously diagnosed and treated type 2 diabetes mellitus (group 1) were divided in two subgroups: AD treatment including metformin (n=32; group 1a) and AD treatment excluding metformin (n=23; group 1b). The 95 patients without diabetes mellitus made up controls (group 2). 18F-FDG uptake in small intestine and colon was visually graded and semi-quantitatively measured using the maximum standardized uptake value.

Results

18F-FDG bowel uptake was significantly increased in AD patients (group 1) as compared to controls (group 2) (p<0.001). Bowel uptake was significantly higher in AD patients including metformin (group 1a) as compared to AD patients excluding metformin (group 1b) (p<0.01), whose bowel uptake was not significantly different from controls (group 2). A metformin treatment was predictive of an increased bowel uptake in the small intestine (odds ratio OR=16.9, p<0.0001) and in the colon (OR=95.3, p<0.0001), independently of the other factors considered in the multivariate analysis. Bowel uptake pattern in the patients treated with metformin was typically intense, diffuse and continuous along the bowel, strongly predominant in the colon, in both the digestive wall and lumen.

Conclusion

This study emphasizes that metformin significantly increases 18F-FDG uptake in colon and, to a lesser extent, in small intestine. It raises the question of stopping metformin treatment before an 18F-FDG PET/CT scan is performed for intra-abdominal neoplasic lesion assessment.

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Correspondence to Eric Gontier.

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Gontier, E., Fourme, E., Wartski, M. et al. High and typical 18F-FDG bowel uptake in patients treated with metformin. Eur J Nucl Med Mol Imaging 35, 95–99 (2008). https://doi.org/10.1007/s00259-007-0563-6

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  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s00259-007-0563-6

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