| Literature DB >> 29282518 |
Irene Virgolini1, Clemens Decristoforo2, Alexander Haug3, Stefano Fanti4, Christian Uprimny2.
Abstract
The aim of this review is to report on the current status of prostate-specific membrane antigen (PSMA)-directed theranostics in prostate cancer (PC) patients. The value of 68Ga-PSMA-directed PET imaging as a diagnostic procedure for primary and recurrent PC as well as the role of evolving PSMA radioligand therapy (PRLT) in castration-resistant (CR)PC is assessed. The most eminent data from mostly retrospective studies currently available on theranostics of prostate cancer are discussed. The current knowledge on 68Ga-PSMA PET/CT implicates that primary staging with PET/CT is meaningful in patients with high-risk PC and that the combination with pelvic multi parametric (mp)MR (or PET/mpMR) reaches the highest impact on patient management. There may be a place for 68Ga-PSMA PET/CT in intermediate-risk PC patients as well, however, only a few data are available at the moment. In secondary staging for local recurrence, 68Ga-PSMA PET/mpMR is superior to PET/CT, whereas for distant recurrence, PET/CT has equivalent results and is faster and cheaper compared to PET/mpMR. 68Ga-PSMA PET/CT is superior to 18F / 11Choline PET/CT in primary staging as well as in secondary staging. In patients with biochemical relapse, PET/CT positivity is directly associated with prostate-specific antigen (PSA) increase and amounts to roughly 50% when PSA is raised to ≤0.5 ng/ml and to ≥90% above 1 ng/ml. Significant clinical results have so far been achieved with the subsequent use of radiolabeled PSMA ligands in the treatment of CRPC. Accumulated activities of 30 to 50 GBq of 177Lu-PSMA ligands seem to be clinically safe with biochemical response and PERCIST/RECIST response in around 75% of patients along with xerostomia in 5-10% of patients as the only notable side effect. On the basis of the current literature, we conclude that PSMA-directed theranostics do have a major clinical impact in diagnosis and therapy of PC patients. We recommend that 68Ga-PSMA PET/CT should be performed in primary staging together with pelvic mpMR in high-risk patients and in all patients for secondary staging, and that PSMA-directed therapy is a potent strategy in CRPC patients when other treatment options have failed. The combination of PSMA-directed therapy with existing therapy modalities (such as 223Ra-chloride or androgen deprivation therapy) has to be explored, and prospective clinical multicenter trials with theranostics are warranted.Entities:
Keywords: 68Ga-PSMA; PET-guided personalized therapy; PET/CT; PET/MR; Prostanostics; Prostate cancer; Theranostics
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29282518 PMCID: PMC5787224 DOI: 10.1007/s00259-017-3882-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur J Nucl Med Mol Imaging ISSN: 1619-7070 Impact factor: 9.236
PSMA ligands used in patients - status October 2017
| COMPOUND | RADIONUCLIDE | REFERENCE |
|---|---|---|
|
| ||
| PSMA-11 (PSMA HBED-CC) | 68Ga | Eder et al. [ |
| PSMA-617 | 177Lu, 225Ac, 64Cu (68Ga, 111In) | Afshar-Oromieh et al. [ |
| PSMA-I&T | 68Ga, 177Lu, 111In | Weineisen et al. [ |
| PSMA-I&S | 99mTc | Robu et al. [ |
| MIP-1404/1405/1427 | 99mTc | Hillier et al. [ |
| MIP-1095 | 131I (124I) | Barret et al. [ |
| DCFBC | 18F | Cho et al. [ |
| DCFPyL | 18F | Chen et al. [ |
| PSMA-1007 | 18F | Cardinale et al. [ |
|
| ||
| Capromab pendetide (ProstaScint®) | 111In | Manyak [ |
| J591 | 111In, 90Y, 177Lu, 89Zr | Bander et al. [ |
| IAB2M | 89Zr | Pandit-Taskar et al. [ |
Fig. 1PET/MRI demonstrating the primary PC (PSA 16 ng/ml, GS 3 + 4) in the right prostate lobe (red arrow) invading the seminal glands with markedly increased 68Ga-PSMA uptake. The tumor presents with restricted diffusion on apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC) mapping and is hypointense on T2-weighted MRI
Fig. 2Detection rate in PC patients with low biochemical relapse of PSA < 1.0 ng/ml scanned either by 18F/11C–choline (orange bars) or 68Ga-PSMA-ligand (green bars)
Fig. 368Ga-PSMA-11 PET/CT images of a 72-year-old PC-patient with BR after RP (PSA 4.26 ng/ml). Early dynamic imaging of the pelvis over the first 8 min p.i. and a whole-body scan at 60-min p.i. were performed. At 60-min p.i., a clear distinction between urinary activity within the neck of the urinary bladder and local recurrence is not possible as presented on axial (1a) and sagittal (1b) fused PET/CT images (red arrow). In contrast, on the axial and sagittal fused PET/CT-images (2a, 2b) at 4 min p.i. of the early dynamic PET-acquisition a focal tracer accumulation with a SUVmax value of 4.45 adjacent to the urinary bladder is visible (red arrow) with no tracer uptake in the urinary bladder present (green arrow) consistent with local recurrence
Fig. 4Potential effect of bicalutamide on 68Ga-PSMA-11 PET-uptake. On initial PET/CT (a, red arrow) moderately increased tracer accumulation with a SUVmax of 4.47 in a LN (5.7 mm in diameter) was found in the region of the left internal iliac vessels as shown on axial fused PET/CT-images. On follow-up PET/CT performed 7 days after initiation of bicalutamide (160 mg/day; 1 week), no pathologic tracer accumulation was found in the left iliac LN, which morphologically remained unchanged (b; yellow arrow). PSA decreased from 0.94 to 0.18 ng/ml under treatment with bicalutamide
68Ga-PSMA PET/CT: Summary of imaging results - status October 2017
| PRIMARY STAGING | SECONDARY STAGING | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Sachpekidis et al. [ | Increased tracer accumulation with time | Ceci et al. [ | PSAdt 6.5 months & PSA 8.8 ng/ml are cut-off values for PET positivity |
| Uprimny et al. [ | Detection rate is dependent on GS and PSA level | Verburg et al. [ | PET positivity: PSA levels and shorter PSAdt are independent predictors |
| Maurer et al. [ | Superior detection rate compared to CT/mpMRI in high- to intermediate-risk patients | Afshar-Oromieh et al. [ | Positivity correlates with PSA level and ADT but not with PSAdt and GS |
| Eiber et al. [ | Superiority of PET mpMRI over mpMRI or PET alone but no correlation with GS and PSA value | Eiber et al. [ | Scan positivity correlates with GS but not with ADT |
| Giesel et al. [ | PET/CT and mpMRI correlate with tumor allocation proven by histopathology | Morigi et al. [ | Superiority over 18F–cholin |
| Budäus et al. [ | LN detection rate is determined by LN size as proven by pathohistology | Pfister et al. [ | Superior detection of local recurrence and/or metastases |
| van Leeuwen et al. [ | LN detection rate is dependent on LN size | van Leeuwen et al. [ | Management change in 28.6% of patients with impact on changes in RT-volume |
| Herlemann et al. [ | Increased sensitivity of PSMA-PET to CT proven by histopathology | Herlemann et al. [ | Increased sensitivity of PSMA-PET to CT |
| Demirkol et al. [ | Increased sensitivity of PSMA-PET to CT | Kabasakal et al. [ | PET positivity correlates with PSA level and GS |
| Sterzing et al. [ | increased sensitivity of PSMA-PET to CT | Sachpekidis et al. [ | Positivity correlates with PSA level; increasing uptake during dynamic PET acquisition |
| Sahlmann et al. [ | Increased detection with late imaging under furosemide | Rauscher et al. [ | Superior to conventional imaging proved by histopathology |
| Iagaru et al. [ | of PET/mpMRI in intermediate- and high-risk patients | Kranzbühler et al. [ | Superiority of PET/mpMRI over PET/CT for local recurrence |
| Giesel et al. [ | Ongoing prospective study of PET/CT in intermediate and high-risk patients | Freitag et al. [ | Superiority of PET/mpMRI over PET/CT for local recurrence but not for distant metastases |
| Schmuck et al. [ | In 5.4% of patients increased detection rate with delayed imaging | ||
| Uprimny et al. [ | In 9.4% increased detection rate by dynamic imaging | ||
Efficiency of 68Ga-PSMA PET/CT in patients with biochemical relapse (low rising PSA) – status October 2017
| AUTHORS | DESIGN | TOTAL number | PSA 0.0–0.1 | PSA 0.1–0.2 | PSA 0.2–0.3 | PSA 0.3–0.5 | PSA 0.5–0.8 | PSA 0.8 < 1 | PSA 1–2 | PSA > 2 | PET/CT SCANNER | IMAGE AQUISITION |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| van Leeuwen et al. [ | Prosp |
|
|
|
|
|
| Ingenuity TOF, Philips | 45 min | |||
| 8% | 23% | 58% | 36% | 57% | ||||||||
| Afshar-Oromieh et al. [ | Retrosp |
|
|
|
|
| Biograph, Siemens | 60 min | ||||
| 47.10% | 50% | 58.30% | 71.80% | |||||||||
|
|
|
|
|
| ||||||||
| 46% | 46% | 73% | 80% | 91.75% | ||||||||
| Eiber et al. [ | Retrosp |
|
|
|
|
| Biograph, Siemens | 60 min | ||||
| 57.89% | 72.73% | 93.06% | 96.77% | |||||||||
|
|
|
|
| |||||||||
| 56.5% | 71.4% | 94.4% | 96.1% | |||||||||
|
| ||||||||||||
| (90.7%) | ||||||||||||
| Verburg et al. [ | Retrosp |
|
|
|
| GEMINI TF16, Philips | 60 min | |||||
| 44% | 79% | 89% | ||||||||||
| Morigi et al. [ | Prosp |
|
|
|
| Ingenuity TOF, Philips | 45 min | |||||
| 50% | 71% | 88% | ||||||||||
| Kabasakal [ | Retrosp |
|
|
|
| Biograph, Siemens | 45–60 min | |||||
| 33% | 50% | 87.5% | ||||||||||
| Ceci et al. [ | Retrosp |
|
|
| Discovery, GE | 8 min, 60 min, (120 min) | ||||||
| 47.60% | 85.70% | |||||||||||
| Sachpekidis et al. [ | Retrosp |
|
|
| Biograph, Siemens | Dynamic for 60 min (pelvis), WB at 80–90 min p.i. | ||||||
| 36.36% | 75% | |||||||||||
| Albisinni et al. [ | Retrosp |
| 45% | 83% | GE Discovery 690 | 60 min | ||||||
*Overall detection rate
Overview of treatment results, side-effects, and quality of life – status October 2017
| Authors | Substance | Number of patients | Therapy Scheme | PSA RESPONSE | RECIST/PERCIST RESPONSE | Quality of life | Side effects | ||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Any decrease | ≥50% decrease | CR | PR | SD | PD | PFS | OS | Nephrotoxicity | Hematotoxicity | Xerostomia/xerophthalmia | |||||
| Baum et al. [ | PSMA-I&T | 56 | 3.4–8.7 GBq /cycle | 45/56 | 25/56 58.9% | 14 | 2 | 9 | 13.7 | Not reached | VAS score: Pain reduction in 2/6 patients, improvement in KPS | None | Insignificant decreases of erythrocytes and leucocytes – but no grade 3 or 4 | Two transient mild cases after 3 and 4 cycles. (8%) | |
| Kulkarni et al. [ | PSMA-617 | 117 | 6 (2–9.7 GBq)/cycle | 61/80 76.3% | 46/87 | 5/58 8.6% | 12/58 20.7% | 29/58 | 18/59 31% | 10.7 months | pain reduction and quality of life improved significantly in symptomatic patients | No grade 3 to 4 | No grade 3 to 4 | Five cases of mild dryness (4.2%), frequent fatigue | |
| Rahbar et al. [ | PSMA-617 | 145 | 5.8 GBq (2–8 GBq)/cycle | 65/99;66% | 40/99;4035/61;57 | 2% | 45% | 25% | 28% | n.a. | n.a. | 18/145 patients grade 3–4 | 8% | ||
| Rahbar et al. [ | PSMA-617 | 74 | 5.9 ± 0.5 GBq | 23/74 (31%) | n.a. | n.a. | n.a. | n.a. | n.a. | n.a. | n.a. | n.a. | Grade 0–1 | n.a. | n.a. |
| Yadav et al. [ | PSMA-617 | 31 | 5 ± 1.8 MBq | 22/31 | n.a. | 2/6 | 3/6 | 1/6 | 6/31 | 12 months | 16 months | ECOG 3➔1 | No grade 3 or 4 | ||
| Heck et al. [ | PSMA-I&T | 19 | 7.4 GBq/cycle | 10/18 | 8/18 | 1/19 | n.a. | 12 | 6 | n.a. | n.a. | bone pain reduction in 85%, 74% ECOG-improvement | No grade 3–4 | Dry mouth 7/19 (37%) | |
| Fendler et al. [ | PSMA-617 | 15 | 3.7 GBq ( | 12/15 (80%) | 9/15 | 4/15 27% | 6/15 40% | 5/15 33% | 9/15 QoL improvement | No grade 4 | |||||
| Scarpa et al. [ | PSMA-617 | 10 | (5.4–6.5 GBq)/cycle | 3/10 (33%) | n.a. | 3/10 | 1/10 | 1/10 | n.a., 3 patients showed mixed response | No grade 3 to 4 | |||||
| Kratochwil et al. [ | PSMA-617 | 30 | 3.7–6.0 GBq /cycle | 21/30 | 13/30 | 6 patients, 50% decreased SUVmax | No data | No acute and late effects up to 24 weeks | Leukopenia: Grade 2: 2 patients | 2/30 after the third cycle | |||||
| Ahmadzadehfar et al. [ | 22/24 | 4.1–7.1 GBq/cycle | 68.2% | n.a. | n.a. | n.a. | n.a. | n.a. | n.a. | n.a. | No grade 3 or 4 | 2 patients: Grade 2–3 anemia | Dry mouth in 8.7% | ||
| Ahmadzadehfar et al. [ | 52 | 6 (4.0–7.2) GBq/cycle | 42; 80.8% | 23;44.2% | n.a. | n.a. | n.a. | n.a. | 60 weeks | n.a. | n.a. | n.a. | n.a. | n.a. | |
| Yordanova et al. [ | PSMA-617 | 55 | 6 GBq (4.0–7.1 GBq) | n.a. | n.a. | n.a. | n.a. | n.a. | n.a. | n.a. | n.a. | No grade 3–4 | n.a. | n.a. | |
| Bräuer et al. [ | PSMA-617 | 59 | 5.9–6.3 GBq/cycle | 91% | 53% | n.a. | n.a. | n.a. | n.a. | 18 weeks | 32 weeks | Transient fatigue in 12 patients | No grade 3 to 4 | 2 patients grade 3 leucopenia and thrombocytopenia (3%), grade 3 anemia in 11 patients (19%) | 15 patients (25%) xerostomia, 1 patient mild dryness of the eyes |
VAS score Visual Analogue Scale, KPS Karnofsky Performance Score, ECOG toxicity and response criteria of the Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group
Fig. 5Follow-up 68Ga-PSMA-11 PET/CT (low-dose CT) of an 80-year-old CRPC-patient who had received treatment with 177Lu-PSMA-617. On the PET scan prior to therapy, local tumor in the prostate bed (red arrow), multiple abdominopelvic and one cervical LN metastases (green arrows) were clearly visible on maximum intensity projection (MIP) (1a) and on fused axial PET/CT-images (1b, 1c). Restaging PET/CT performed 8 weeks after administration of four cycles of 177Lu-PSMA-617 with a total accumulated activity of 24.9 GBq showed a significant reduction of the primary tumor (red arrow) and an impressive partial response of LN metastases with only small metastases left in the right iliac region (green arrows), as displayed on MIP (2a) and fused axial PET/CT-images (2b, 2c)
Fig. 6Current status of theranostics in prostate cancer ("Prostanostics"). The current status of PSMA-directed theranostics in PC patients is based on retrospective studies. 68Ga-PSMA PET/CT in primary staging is meaningful in patients with high-risk PC for local tumor assessment. The combination with pelvic multi parametric (mp)MR (or PET/mpMR) reaches the highest impact on patient management. In secondary staging for local recurrence, 68Ga-PSMA PET/mpMR is superior to PET/CT, whereas for distant recurrence, PET/CT has equivalent results and is faster and cheaper compared to PET/mpMR. 68Ga-PSMA PET/CT is superior to 18F / 11choline PET/CT in primary staging as well as in secondary staging. Significant clinical results have so far been achieved with the subsequent use of radiolabeled PSMA ligands in the treatment of CRPC, especially with 177Lu-PSMA ligands. Potential results have been demonstrated for α-emitting ligands and the combination treatment of β- and α-emitters is discussed