| Literature DB >> 30617554 |
Usman Bashir1,2, Alison Tree1,3, Erik Mayer4, Daniel Levine1,2, Chris Parker1,3, David Dearnaley1, Wim J G Oyen5,6.
Abstract
PURPOSE: With the availability of ultra-sensitive PSA assays, early biochemical relapse (eBCR) of prostate cancer is increasingly being detected at values much lower than the conventional threshold of 0.2 ng/ml. Accurate localisation of disease in this setting may allow treatment modification and improved outcomes, especially in patients with pelvis-confined or extra-pelvic oligometastasis (defined as up to three pelvic nodal or distant sites). We aimed to measure the detection rate of [68]Ga-PSMA-HBNED-CC (PSMA)-PET/CT and its influence on patient management in eBCR of prostate cancer following radical prostatectomy (RP).Entities:
Keywords: PSMA-PET/CT; Prostate cancer; Recurrence
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30617554 PMCID: PMC6450837 DOI: 10.1007/s00259-018-4249-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur J Nucl Med Mol Imaging ISSN: 1619-7070 Impact factor: 9.236
Clinical and pathologic characteristics of the study population (n = 28)
| Clinical variable | Value |
|---|---|
| Mean age (years) | 65.6 (range 50–76.2) |
| PSA at time of assessment (ng/ml)a | |
| Mean | 0.24 (SD 0.12) |
| Median | 0.22 (IQR 0.15–0.34) |
| PSA pre-prostatectomy (ng/ml) | |
| Mean | 11 (SD 9.07) |
| Median | 7.6 (IQR 5.7–11.35) |
| Gleason score | |
| 6–7 | 21 (75%) |
| 8–10 | 7 (25%) |
| Tumour stage | |
| T2 | 7 (25%) |
| T3 | 21 (75%) |
| Nodal stage | |
| N0 | 18 (64%) |
| N1 | 4 (14%) |
| Nx | 6 (22%) |
| Positive margin | |
| R0 | 14 (50%) |
| R1 | 8 (29%) |
| Unknown | 6 (21%) |
| NCCN risk group | |
| Intermediate | 3 (11%) |
| High | 23 (82%) |
| Unknown | 2 (7%) |
| Previous androgen dDeprivation treatment b | 6 (21.4%) |
| Previous radiotherapy | |
| Prostatectomy bed only | 11 (39.2%) |
| Prostatectomy bed and pelvic nodes | 2 (7.1%) |
aPSA-value at the time of referral for PSMA-PET/CT
Fig. 1Site-wise distribution of individual lesions in 16 patients with prostatectomy bed relapse or oligometastasis; the one patient with polymetastasis is not included in this analysis. Green-shaded region shows typical pelvic lymph node radiotherapy fields. The lymph node short axes were median 5 mm (range 3 mm to 8 mm)
Fig. 2Flowchart illustrating sites of disease and management plans. Bars above the management plans show whether PSMA-PET/CT changed management (red) or not (blue). eBCR = early biochemical recurrence. SRT = salvage radiotherapy. ADT = androgen deprivation treatment. Rx = therapy
Fig. 3Serial Ga-68-PSMA-PET/CT in a 67-year-old man with BCR following radical prostatectomy and prostatectomy bed radiotherapy. a Initial scan at PSA 0.1 ng/ml. Left internal iliac lymph node (arrow) considered benign, morphologically (< 4 mm diameter) and metabolically (SUV 1.2). b PSA rise to 0.2 ng/ml, follow-up scan after 4 months. Minimal enlargement of the lymph node, still within normal limits (SUV 0.7; PSA). c Further PSA rise to 0.4 ng/ml, follow up scan 5 months after b. Lymph node remains subcentimetre (6 mm), but due to high PSMA uptake (SUVmax 8.2), now considered suspicious for malignant metastasis