| Literature DB >> 29751842 |
Sebastian Zschaeck1,2, Fabian Lohaus3,4, Marcus Beck5, Gregor Habl6,7, Stephanie Kroeze8, Constantinos Zamboglou9,10, Stefan Alexander Koerber11,12, Jürgen Debus11,12, Tobias Hölscher3,4, Peter Wust5, Ute Ganswindt13, Alexander D J Baur14, Klaus Zöphel15, Nikola Cihoric16, Matthias Guckenberger8, Stephanie E Combs6,7,17, Anca Ligia Grosu9,10, Pirus Ghadjar5, Claus Belka18,17.
Abstract
68Gallium prostate specific membrane antigen (PSMA) ligand positron emission tomography (PET) is an increasingly used imaging modality in prostate cancer, especially in cases of tumor recurrence after curative intended therapy. Owed to the novelty of the PSMA-targeting tracers, clinical evidence on the value of PSMA-PET is moderate but rapidly increasing. State of the art imaging is pivotal for radiotherapy treatment planning as it may affect dose prescription, target delineation and use of concomitant therapy.This review summarizes the evidence on PSMA-PET imaging from a radiation oncologist's point of view. Additionally a short survey containing twelve examples of patients and 6 additional questions was performed in seven mayor academic centers with experience in PSMA ligand imaging and the findings are reported here.Entities:
Keywords: Image guided treatment planning; PSMA-PET; Primary radiotherapy; Prostate-cancer; Review; Salvage radiotherapy; Survey
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29751842 PMCID: PMC5948793 DOI: 10.1186/s13014-018-1047-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Radiat Oncol ISSN: 1748-717X Impact factor: 3.481
Fig. 1Number of results for the search term “psma pet” in pubmed.gov with annual publication date restrictions starting from January 2014 until July 2017 (x-axis) and logarithmic depiction of cumulative publications (y-axis)
First reports on biochemical response following PSMA based radiotherapy after prior radical treatment of the prostate
| Referal for salvage/ non primary radiotherapy, PSA response | ||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Author | Number of irradiated patients | Treatment of | Median PSA value | ADT use before radiotherapy | Follow up time (months) | PSA response during follow up | Re-Radiation | ADT initiation during follow up |
| Henkenberens [ | 23 | N, Ma, | 2.75 | 0% | 12.4 | 52% | 26% | 22% |
| Zschaeck [ | 20 (11) | T, N, Ma, Mb | 0.95 | 45% (0%) | 29.0 | 70% (73%) | 15% (27%) | 5% (9%) |
| Bluemel [ | 43 | T, N, Ma, Mb | 0.60 | 0% | 8.1 | 83%a | 0% | n.a. |
| Emmett [ | 99 | T, N, Ma, Mb | 0.28 | 0% | 10.5 | 72% | n.a. | n.a. |
| Habl [ | 15 | Mb | 1.99 | 20% | 22.5 | 20% | 7% | n.a. |
| Henkenberens [ | 29 | T, N, Ma, Mb | 1.47 | 38% | 8.3 | 96% | 7% | 0% |
| Guler [ | 23 | N, Ma, Mb | 1.10 | 100% (43%b) | 7.0 | 83% | 0% | 9% |
T = local recurrence, N = pelvic lymph nodes, Ma = extrapelvic lymph nodes, Mb = bony metastases. ADT androgen deprivation therapy
aFollow up only available for 21 patients: 20 presenting good response, however 3 patients with rising PSA values during salvage irradiation were included to the non-responders (4/24 patients)
b43% of patients presented with hormone refractory situation after long-term ADT
Fig. 2Willingness of twelve radiation oncologists to omit radiotherapy to the prostate fossa (prostate fossa RT). Asked if they would consider omission of prostate fossa RT in a high-risk patient after completely resected (R0) prostate cancer with persisting PSA values (> 0.6 ng/ml). Possible disposition had to be scored and ranged from 1 (definitely yes) to 9 (definitely no). Most radiation oncologists were in favour of prostate fossa RT in case of PSMA positive lesions within the pelvis (left), a high disagreement existed in case of extrapelvic PSMA positive lymph node lesions as only finding in PET (right). Boxplot showing 50% quartiles, whiskers showing whole range of given responses