| Literature DB >> 27933280 |
Gary J R Cook1, Gurdip Azad1, Anwar R Padhani2.
Abstract
The bone scan continues to be recommended for both the staging and therapy response assessment of skeletal metastases from prostate cancer. However, it is widely recognised that bone scans have limited sensitivity for disease detection and is both insensitive and non-specific for determining treatment response, at an early enough time point to be clinically useful. We, therefore, review the evolving roles of nuclear medicine and radiology for this application. We have reviewed the published literature reporting recent developments in imaging bone metastases in prostate cancer, and provide a balanced synopsis of the state of the art. The development of single-photon emission computed tomography combined with computed tomography has improved detection sensitivity and specificity but has not yet been shown to lead to improvements in monitoring therapy. A number of bone-specific and tumour-specific tracers for positron emission tomography/computed tomography (PET/CT) are now available for advanced prostate cancer that show promise in both clinical settings. At the same time, the development of whole-body magnetic resonance imaging (WB-MRI) that incorporates diffusion-weighted imaging also offers significant improvements for detection and therapy response assessment. There are emerging data showing comparative SPECT/CT, PET/CT, and WB-MRI test performance for disease detection, but no compelling data on the usefulness of these technologies in response assessment have yet emerged.Entities:
Keywords: Bone metastases; Bone scan; Positron emission tomography; Prostate cancer; Single photon emission computed tomography; Whole body magnetic resonance imaging
Year: 2016 PMID: 27933280 PMCID: PMC5118401 DOI: 10.1007/s40336-016-0196-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Transl Imaging ISSN: 2281-5872
Fig. 1A patient with metastatic prostate cancer undergoing treatment with docetaxel chemotherapy. Top row 11C-choline PET maximum intensity projection images at baseline (left) and 8 weeks (right) and bottom row corresponding 18F-fluoride PET images. The higher contrast between metastases and the normal skeleton on the 18F-fluoride scans compared to the 11C-choline scans allows easier detection of disease. However, whilst there is a clear metabolic response in the bone metastases on the 11C-choline scans, there is a similar distribution and intensity of most lesions on the 18F-fluoride scans and some lesions show an increase in activity (arrows). This is likely to be due to a flare response at 8 weeks on the 18F-fluoride PET scans limiting the sensitivity and specificity in response prediction at early time points with this tracer as changes in osteoblastic activity lag behind changes in tumour metabolism
Fig. 2A 64 year old man with metastatic castrate resistant prostate cancer. WB-MRI assessments before and after five cycles of abiraterone therapy. The panel pairs are morphologic T1-weighted (left) and fat-suppressed T2-weighted (middle) sequences, and high b value (b 900 s/mm2) diffusion-weighted images (right) displayed as inverted MIP images. There is a discordant response to therapy documented on the imaging despite reductions in serum PSA levels. The white arrows and ring show decrease in tumour in the sacrum with return of normal marrow fat and relief of the spinal cord compression on the fat-suppressed T2-weighted sequence. However, the red arrows show disease progression in the spine, right iliac bone and left acetabulum