| Literature DB >> 29075832 |
B Grubmüller1, P Baltzer2, D D'Andrea1, S Korn1, A R Haug3, M Hacker3, K H Grubmüller4, G M Goldner5, W Wadsak3,6, S Pfaff3, J Babich7, C Seitz1, H Fajkovic1, M Susani8, P Mazal8, G Kramer1, S F Shariat1,9,10, Markus Hartenbach11.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the diagnostic performance of [68Ga]Ga-PSMAHBED-CC conjugate 11 positron emission tomography (PSMA-PET) in the early detection of metastases in patients with biochemical recurrence (BCR) after radical prostatectomy (RP) for clinically non-metastatic prostate cancer, to compare it to CT/MRI alone and to assess its impact on further therapeutic decisions.Entities:
Keywords: Biochemical recurrence; Hybrid imaging; PET/CT; PET/MRI; PSMA ligand; Prostate cancer
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29075832 PMCID: PMC5745568 DOI: 10.1007/s00259-017-3858-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur J Nucl Med Mol Imaging ISSN: 1619-7070 Impact factor: 9.236
Fig. 1Additional diagnostic value of simultaneous PET/MRI: 77 y/o, post-RPE + RT, pT3a pN1 Gleason 9, PSA at PET/MRI: 1.35 ng/ml: Confirmation of positive [68Ga]-PSMAHBED-CC conjugate 11 uptake in a pararectal lymph node (a; ca. 5 mm), which is difficult to detect on T2w turbo spin echo sequences (c), but has a significant diffusion restriction on DWI b600 images (b) and a low apparent diffusion coefficient (d), which confirms high cell density in this area. Androgen deprivation therapy was applied. The actual PSA serum level is still <0.2 ng/ml
Clinicopathologic features of 117 patients evaluated with [68Ga]Ga-PSMAHBED-CC conjugate 11 ligand PET-CT or PET-MRI for biochemical recurrence after radical prostatectomy for clinically non-metastatic prostate cancer with curative intent
| Age (years), median (IQR) | 74 (68–76) |
| Pelvic lymphadenectomy performed at time of RP, n (%) | 112 (95.7) |
| Pathological stage after RP, n (%) | |
| pT2 | 46 (39.3) |
| pT3a | 32 (27.4) |
| pT3b | 37 (31.6) |
| pT4 | 2 (1.7) |
| Positive LN at RP, n (%) | 11 (9.8) |
| Positive surgical margins, n (%) | 49 (41.9) |
| Gleason score at RP, n (%) | |
| 6 | 15 (12.8) |
| 7 | 56 (47.9) |
| ≥8 | 46 (39.3) |
| Post surgery RT, n (%) | 69 (59.0) |
| Adjuvant RT | 27 (23.1) |
| Salvage RT | 42 (35.9) |
| PSMA application (MBq), median (IQR) | 180 (167–192) |
IQR interquartile range, RP radical prostatectomy, LN lymph node, RT radiotherapy, PSMA prostate-specific membrane antigen, MBq megabecquerel
Distribution of [68Ga]Ga-PSMAHBED-CC conjugate 11 ligand PET/CT(MRI)-avid lesions in 100 patients with biochemical recurrence after radical prostatectomy
| Pelvic lymph nodes only, n (%) | 35 (35) |
| Retroperitoneal lymph nodes only, n (%) | 6 (6) |
| Mediastinal lymph nodes only, n (%) | 2 (2) |
| Bone only, n (%) | 12 (12) |
| Organ metastases only (lungs), n (%) | 2 (2) |
| Local recurrence at site of RP, n (%) | 22 (22) |
| Multiple recurrence sites, n (%) | 21 (21) |
RP radical prostatectomy
Fig. 2Change of therapy decision in 50 patients with negative standard imaging and positive PSMA-PET. RT = radiotherapy, ADT = androgen deprivation therapy. *1 patient with RT changed to a detected bone metastasis instead of prostate bed
Fig. 3High sensitivity of [68Ga]Ga-PSMAHBED-CC conjugate 11 (PSMA)-PET and diagnostic benefit by simultaneous PET/MRI in a 68 y/o patient after radical prostatectomy and radiation therapy of the prostate bed. PSA relapse of 1.7 ng/ml at the time point of PSMA-PET/MRI. Radiation therapy was planned in the thoracic vertebra (a; also prospectively positive on MRI) but was then extended to the ischiadic arc. The additional lesion is not seen on T2w sequences (b), but the focal PSMA uptake (c+e) was also confirmed by a focal diffusion restriction on diffusion-weighted b600 sequences (d). PSA turned to <0.2 ng/ml after RT