| Literature DB >> 32242253 |
Judith Olde Heuvel1,2, Berlinda J de Wit-van der Veen3, Henk G van der Poel4, Elise M Bekers5, Maarten R Grootendorst6, Kunal N Vyas6, Cornelis H Slump7, Marcel P M Stokkel3.
Abstract
PURPOSE: Currently, approximately 11-38% of prostate cancer (PCa) patients undergoing radical prostatectomy have a positive surgical margin (PSM) on histopathology. Cerenkov luminescence imaging (CLI) using 68Ga-prostate-specific membrane antigen (68Ga-PSMA) is a novel technique for intraoperative margin assessment. The aim of this first-in-man study was to investigate the feasibility of intraoperative 68Ga-PSMA CLI. In this study, feasibility was defined as the ability to distinguish between a positive and negative surgical margin, imaging within 45 min and low radiation exposure to staff.Entities:
Keywords: 68-Gallium-PSMA intraoperative assessment; Cerenkov imaging; Positive surgical margin; Primary prostate cancer
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32242253 PMCID: PMC7515945 DOI: 10.1007/s00259-020-04783-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur J Nucl Med Mol Imaging ISSN: 1619-7070 Impact factor: 9.236
Fig. 1Workflow of the current CLI study, a A preoperative 68Ga-PSMA PET-CT and MRI scan are acquired 3–4 weeks prior to surgery as per standard of care, based on the result of these images patients are included. b During surgery 68Ga-PSMA is administered i.v. after the da Vinci® surgical system is docked. Radiation dose to all surgical staff is monitored. Note the position of the scrub nurse in close proximity to the patient. Once removed, the prostate is rinsed with NaCl to clear any radioactive urine and blood that could be present on the surface. c The prostate is positioned in a disposable specimen tray. d Images of all six sides of the prostate using the different settings are acquired in the CLI device. e Unfiltered Cerenkov image of the intact prostate specimen. f Upon image completion of the intact prostate, the prostate is inked and cleaved ~ 1 cm from the apex by a trained person. g Image of the cleaved prostate and the corresponding CLI image acquired with the same settings as the intact specimen to confirm tumour uptake and quantify the intensity in benign and cancerous tissue
Fig. 2Overview of the image analysis and quantification methods. a Intraoperative Cerenkov image of the specimen after median and Gaussian filtering. This image is used for visual identification of PSMs and NSMs. b A Cerenkov image of an empty background. Note the presence of the defective pixel (green arrow). c Post-processed Cerenkov image after background subtraction. Note that the background subtraction removes the defective pixel on the post-processed image. d The PSMA PET/CT scan. The green line on the maximum intensity profile (MIP) image indicates the location where the prostate is cleaved. The transverse image of the fused PET/CT scan highlights the location of the tumour (red ROI) and benign tissue (blue ROI). e Intraoperative CLI image of the prostate from patient 2 after the specimen was cleaved at the apex, showing the tumour (red ROI) and the benign tissue (blue ROI). f CLI image of intact prostate specimen from patient 2. Two hotspots, corresponding with a histopathological PSM, can be identified (ROI 1 and ROI 3). Areas with no increased signal, corresponding with benign tissue from a NSM, can also be seen (ROI 2). For clarity, each ROI is also highlighted with a green arrow. For this patient the TBR was calculated by dividing the radiance from ROI 1 and ROI in 2. The dotted white line represents the location where the prostate was cleaved. g Histopathology image of the area corresponding with ROI 3 on the intact CLI image. A PSM can be identified (green arrow)
Patient characteristics and CLI and histology results of all 5 patients
| Patient 1 | Patient 2 | Patient 3 | Patient 4 | Patient 5 | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Age (y) | 67 | 71 | 58 | 73 | 63 |
| Weight (kg) | 75 | 75 | 106 | 126 | 86 |
| Preoperative tumour grade | cT3bN0M0 | cT1cN0M0 | cT1cN0M0 | cT1cN0M0 | cT2cN0M0 |
| Postoperative tumour grade | pT3aN0Mx | pT3aN0Mx | pT2cN0Mx | pT3bN1Mx | pT2N0Mx |
| iPSA (μg/L) | 29.9 | 4.4 | 5.3 | 8.3 | 6.4 |
| Gleason Score | 4 + 4 = 8 | 4 + 4 = 8 | 4 + 4 = 8 | 4 + 5 = 9 | 4 + 9 |
| Prostate volume MRI (cc) | 47 | 30 | 41 | 76 | 28 |
| SUVmax on PSMA PET/CT | 24.8 | 31.6 | 4.3 | 49.2 | 21.2 |
| Injected 68Ga-PSMA activity (MBq) | 118 | 68 | 88 | 76 | 65 |
| Activity at start of CLI (MBq) | 45 | 51 | 38 | 42 | 34 |
| Suspected PSM CLI | Yes | Yes | No | Yes | Yes |
| PSM on histopathology | Yes | Yes | No | No | No |
| Location agreement CLI – Hpath | Yes | Yes | N/A | Yes** | Yes** |
| Closeness tumour to surface (mm) | 0 | 0 | 3 | 0.1 | 0.1 |
Corrected radiance hotspot intact prostate (p/s/cm2/sr) 550 nm filter/no filter | 1497/x | 1446/16691 1711/14533 | 798/11139 | 1617/16474 | 1264/12500 |
TBR intact prostate 550 nm filter/no filter | 3.3/x | 4.0/4.7 4.7/4.1 | 2.5/2.5 | 3.3/2.7 | 7.7/2.5 |
Corrected radiance hotspot cleaved prostate (p/s/cm2/sr) 550 nm filter/no filter | 2135/x | 1149/12554 | ^ | 1783/16159 | 2642/18430 |
TBR cleaved prostate 550 nm filter/no filter | 3.1/x | 2.2/1.8 | ^ | 3.1/2.6 | 5.9/1.8 |
The displayed radiances are activity and decay corrected. iPSA, initial prostate specimen antigen level; HPath, histopathology; TBR, tumour-to-background ratio. ^In this patient, the tumour was located in the base of the prostate, while the prostate was cleaved ~1 cm from the apex, thus preventing visualization of the tumour on CLI. **Although no histopathological PSM, the location of the hotspot on CLI agreed to a tumour to ink distance of < 0.1 mm on the histopathology slide. x, No non-filtered image taken. N/A, As there was a NSM in patient 3,4,5, there was no TBR calculated from the intact specimen. Note that patient 2 had a PSM on two locations; therefore the corrected radiance of both hotspots is displayed, as well as the TBR of both locations on the intact prostate. Pre- and postoperative tumour grade are based on the clinical TNM stage [26]: T for primary tumour, N for nodal stage, M for metastases. R stands for margin status and X indicates that the status of a certain characteristic cannot be determined. c for clinical, which indicates that the classification is based on clinical parameters. p for pathological, which indicates that the classification was performed in this case on the excised prostate in the pathology lab
Fig. 3Results of protocol optimisation process with different acquisition settings. The images in the upper row are from patient 1 who had a histopathological PSM at the apex. All images were acquired with 8 × 8 pixel binning and 550 nm shortpass filter but with different exposure times of 30 s (TBR:1.10), 60 s (TBR:1.18), 150 s (TBR:1.85) and 300 s (TBR:1.98). The images in the centre row are also from patient 1and were acquired with 150 s exposure time and filter, but different pixel binning 2 × 2 (TBR:1.06), 4 × 4 (TBR:1.26) and 8 × 8 (TBR:1.85). The bottom row images are from patient 3 and were acquired with 150 s exposure time and 8 × 8 binning, but without a filter (TBR:4.33) and with filter (TBR:1.85), respectively. Note that the area of increased signal with the green arrow appears in all non-background subtracted images; this is an artefact from a defect pixel in the camera of the CLI system, and can be ignored. The colour bar indicates the scale of counts
Fig. 4An overview of the PET/CT scans and CLI images of all five patients. a The MIP of the PSMA PET-scan. Note that these scans were obtained using 68Ga-HBEDCC-PSMA (patient 5) and 18F-DCFPyl (patient 1, 2, 3, 4), hence the difference in PSMA-tracer distribution. b The transverse image of the fused PSMA PET/CT-scan at the level of the prostate lesion. c Non-filtered CLI images of intact prostate specimen. Note that patient one did not have a non-filtered image taken. d Filtered CLI images of intact prostate specimen. e Non-filtered CLI images of the cleaved prostate. The prostate specimen was cleaved at ~ 1 cm from the apex. Note that in patient 3, it was not located in the apex region but in the base, and therefore no tumour signal is visible on the CLI image. Scaling of the PET-scans was performed based on the intensity of the liver; CLI images were scaled visually based on the benign background signal. The displayed CLI images are the intraoperative images that are not corrected for background which explains the presence of the defective pixel. All CLI images were acquired with 150 s exposure time and 8 × 8 binning. *The patient numbers marked with a star had a PSM based on histopathology