| Literature DB >> 29126446 |
Nina-Sophie Schmidt-Hegemann1, Wolfgang Peter Fendler2, Alexander Buchner3, Christian Stief3, Paul Rogowski1, Maximilian Niyazi1, Chukwuka Eze1, Minglun Li1, Peter Bartenstein2, Claus Belka1, Ute Ganswindt4,5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: To determine the potential role of 68Ga-PSMA positron emission tomography/computed tomography (PET/CT) in radiotherapy (RT) planning for prostate cancer (PCa).Entities:
Keywords: 68Ga-PSMA PET/CT; Prostate cancer; Radical prostatectomy; Radiotherapy
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29126446 PMCID: PMC5681820 DOI: 10.1186/s13014-017-0902-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Radiat Oncol ISSN: 1748-717X Impact factor: 3.481
Patients’ characteristics
| Characteristic | All pts. | Initial diagnosis | PSA relapse | PSA persistence |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Number | 129 | 20 | 49 | 60 |
| Age (years; median, range) | 72 (47–86) | 76 (53–86) | 74 (50–83) | 69 (47–83) |
| Gleason Score [pts] | ||||
| 6 | 11 (8.5%) | 3 (15%) | 7 (14.3%) | 1 (1.7%) |
| 7a | 27 (20.9%) | 3 (15%) | 19 (38.8%) | 5 (8.3%) |
| 7b | 37 (28.7%) | 6 (30%) | 11 (22.4%) | 20 (33.3%) |
| 8 | 18 (14%) | 3 (15%) | 7 (14.3%) | 8 (13.3%) |
| 9 | 34 (26.4%) | 5 (25%) | 5 (10.2%) | 24 (40.0%) |
| 10 | 2 (1.6%) | – | – | 2 (3.3%) |
| Risk group (D’Amico) [pts] | ||||
| low | 5 (3.9%) | 1 (5.0%) | 3 (6.1%) | 1 (1.7%) |
| intermediate | 21 (16.3%) | 2 (10.0%) | 13 (26.5%) | 6 (10.0%) |
| high | 103 (79.8%) | 17 (85%) | 33 (67.3%) | 53 (88.3%) |
| PSMA PET positive [pts] | 92 (71.3%) | 20 (100%) | 27 (55.1%) | 45 (75%) |
| PSA PRE-PSMA PET [ng/ml] (median/mean, range) | 0.86/6.04 (0.13–150.00) | 12.4/27.28 (0.14–150.0) | 0.49/1.00 (0.15–6.24) | 0.99/3.08 (0.13–39.2) |
| PSA doubling time | ||||
| ≤ 10 months | 81 (74.3%) | – | 21 (42.9%) | 60 (100%) |
| > 10 months | 28 (25.7%) | – | 28 (57.1%) | – |
| ADT at time of PET [pts] | 14 (10.9%) | 2 (10%) | 4 (8.2%) | 8 (13.3%) |
| Activity of 68Ga-PSMA-HBED-CC [MBq] (mean, range) | 190.43 (87–293) | 197.50 (100–293) | 192.07 (94–293) | 186.85 (87–286) |
(Pts patients, PSA prostate specific antigen, ADT androgen deprivation therapy, MBq Mega-Becquerel)
Patient characteristics: PET positive vs. PET negative
| Characteristic | PET positive | PET negative |
|---|---|---|
| Number | 92 | 37 |
| Age (years) at PSMA PET (median, range) | 72 (49–86) | 72 (47–80) |
| Gleason Score [pts] | ||
| 6 | 8 (8.7%) | 3 (8.1%) |
| 7a | 19 (20.7%) | 8 (21.6%) |
| 7b | 23 (25.0%) | 14 (37.8%) |
| 8 | 13 (14.1%) | 5 (13.5%) |
| 9 | 27 (29.3%) | 7 (18.9%) |
| 10 | 2 (2.2%) | – |
| Risk group (D’Amico) [pts] | ||
| low | 3 (3.3%) | 2 (5.4%) |
| intermediate | 14 (15.2%) | 7 (18.9%) |
| high | 75 (81.5%) | 28 (75.7%) |
| PSA PRE-PSMA PET [ng/ml] (median/mean, range) | 1.90/8.27 (0.14–150.0) | 0.30/0.50 (0.13–3.24) |
| PSA doubling time | ||
| ≤ 10 months | 56 (77.8%) | 25 (67.6%) |
| > 10 months | 16 (22.2%) | 12 (32.4%) |
| ADT at time of PET [pts] | 12 (13.0%) | 2 (5.4%) |
| Activity of 68Ga-PSMA-HBED-CC [MBq] (mean, range) | 191.96 (87–293) | 186.78 (94–293) |
(Pts patients, PSA prostate specific antigen, ADT androgen deprivation therapy, MBq Mega-Becquerel)
Univariate and multivariate analysis of factors predicting 68Ga-PSMA PET/CT positive findings
| Association between PET positive results and | Present (yes/no) |
|
|
|---|---|---|---|
| ADT | No | 0.222 | 0.321 |
| Activity of 68Ga-PSMA-HBED-CC [MBq] | No | 0.590 | 0.843 |
| PSA PRE-PSMA PET | Yes | <0.001* | 0.002* |
| PSA doubling time ≤/> 10 months | No | 0.517 | 0.942 |
| Gleason Score | No | 0.285 | 0.482 |
(PSA prostate specific antigen, ADT androgen deprivation therapy, MBq Mega-Becquerel)
aunivariate and bmultivariate binary logistic regression analysis
*p < 0.05 statistically significant
Fig. 1Probability of a pathological 68Ga-PSMA PET/CT depending on PSA levels in 129 patients. Corresponding table shows the rates of PET/CTs with/without pathological radiotracer uptake in % according to PSA level
Fig. 2Probability of a pathological 68Ga-PSMA PET/CT depending on GS in 129 patients. Corresponding table shows the rates of PET/CTs with/without pathological radiotracer uptake in % according to GS class
Fig. 3Lesion based analysis (PET-positive local recurrence/primary tumour and PET-positive lymph node and distant metastases) according to sub-grouping of patients (patients before definitive RT at initial diagnosis, patients before salvage RT with PSA recurrence, patients before Salvage RT with PSA < 0.5 ng/ml, patients before additive RT with PSA persistence, patients before additive RT with PSA persistence with PSA < 0.5 ng/ml)
Fig. 4Radiotherapy treatment planning in three patients based on PSMA PET/CT information. 68Ga-PSMA PET/CT (B, D, F) and target volumes with simultaneously integrated boost volumes (A, C, E) are shown. Figs. A and B show a patient with PSA recurrence and evidence of lymph node metastasis in 68Ga-PSMA PET/CT who was treated with a simultaneously integrated boost to the lymph node. Figs. C and D show a patient with PSA recurrence due to local relapse in the region of the former prostate gland. This local relapse was treated with a simultaneously integrated boost volume. Figs. F and E show a patient with singular osseous metastasis that was treated with a simultaneously integrated boost