PET Image in PAH Patients

Participation Deadline: 12/01/2026
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Description

Objective: Investigators will conduct in-human PET imaging of 18F-fluoroglutamine (18F-FGln) in patients with PAH to compare glutamine uptake to that of controls.

Specific Aim: Utilizing18F-FGln PET imaging to measure pathogenic glutamine uptake in patients with PAH or eiPAH and controls.

Significance: Investigator multi-disciplinary team, comprised of Drs. Chan, Tavakoli, and Mason are already actively collaborating together, and are uniquely positioned to image and quantify glutamine uptake in this special patient population. In doing so, investigators will determine the potential of this [F-18]FGln to serve as a non-invasive imaging biomarker of in vivo glutamine flux and metabolism associated with PAH Investigators are proposing a pilot experiment, Objective: Investigators will conduct in-human PET imaging of 18F-fluoroglutamine (18F-FGln) in patients with PAH to compare glutamine uptake to that of controls.

Specific Aim: Utilizing18F-FGln PET imaging to measure pathogenic glutamine uptake in patients with PAH or eiPAH and controls.

Significance: Investigator multi-disciplinary team, comprised of Drs. Chan, Tavakoli, and Mason are already actively collaborating together, and are uniquely positioned to image and quantify glutamine uptake in this special patient population. In doing so, investigators will determine the potential of this [F-18]FGln to serve as a non-invasive imaging biomarker of in vivo glutamine flux and metabolism associated with PAH

Investigators are proposing a pilot experiment, in which we will enroll the following subjects each group:

10 subjects with Idiopathic PAH (IPAH) 17 subjects with Scleroderma-PAH (SSc-PAH) 7 subjects with Scleroderma exercise induced PAH (SSc-eiPAH) 10 subjects with scleroderma but no PAH 27 healthy controls The cases will be matched for age/gender/race with 27 healthy controls for comparison.

If we had to recruit controls before cases, we will still be able to match cases and controls. We will initiate study visits with 1 or 2 controls, and matching 2 controls with 40 cases. 18F-FGN PET Imaging will be performed at The University of Pittsburgh’s PET Research Facility.

Study visit: The study visit will take around 3-4 hours, the duration of PET scan will be around 90 minutes.

Upon subject arrival, CRC will do the following:

1. Review the medications the subject is currently on.
2. Take the subject vitals (Temperature/blood pressure/pulse).
3. Women of child-bearing potential (WCBP) will need to complete a urine pregnancy test on the day of the scan procedure, prior to any PET scan procedures. An intravenous catheter will be placed in the subject’s arm, which will be used for radiotracer administration. All PET scans will be performed for a single bed position on a Siemens Biograph mCT Flow. Patients will be positioned in the scanner in a head-first supine orientation. A scout CT scan will be performed to fix the PET bed position such that the superior axial image planes are located approximately 1 cm above the lung apex, which will cover the axial extent of the heart and the majority of lung tissue. A low dose helical CT scan will be performed during a ~15 sec inspiratory breath hold and used for CT-based attenuation correction of PET emission data and as an anatomical reference for image analyses. Following the CT acquisition, approximately 10.0 mCi of 18F-FGln will be injected intravenously as a slow bolus (20 sec) and 90 minutes of PET emission data will be collected in list-mode. List-mode PET emission data will be binned into an ungated dynamic series of 28 frames for initial tracer kinetic analyses. Additional reconstructions will be performed with cardiac gating to isolate the end-diastole phase, respiratory gating to isolate the inspiratory respiratory phase, and dual gating (cardiac and respiratory gating) to achieve virtually motion-free PET images. These data will also be used to optimize reconstruction and gating parameters for future 18F-FGln studies.

If for reasons of participant discomfort or technical difficulty (problems with PET camera, cyclotron breakdown etc.), the full PET scanning procedure cannot be completed in 1 day we may be given the option to ask the participant to return within 30 days to complete the study. On this day, preparation will again consist of intravenous catheterization. The scanning protocol will be identical to that described above. Participant will not receive more than 2-3 CT scans and, no more than two [F-18] FGN PET scans with maximum effective dose exposure of 1.777 rads, as a result in participation in this research study. If participant had to be scheduled for a another day for this study, he/she will receive an additional IV line and will also have to undergo urine pregnancy testing (if applicable). Follow-up Procedures: A follow-up telephone call will be made to subjects by the research team approximately 1 to 7 days after the PET/CT scan to inquire about any adverse events the participant may have encountered related to the scans. Medical Record Information: We will request subjects’ authorization to access medical record information from their past, current and future medical record information related to their health condition to be recorded into the Research study. This information will be collected from Heart and Vascular Institute (HVI) records, hospital records and, if applicable, private physician records. Since heart failure symptoms/progression may change over time, and these changes may be important to this study result, future medical records will be collected indefinitely. The medical record information contained within the study database will be used for research related purposes for an indefinite time. Subjects medical record information may be reviewed to see if they were eligible for any ongoing or future research studies; if they were eligible, then we may contact them