| Literature DB >> 33917238 |
Wajahat Khatri1, Hyun Woo Chung2, Rudolf A Werner3, Jeffrey P Leal1, Kenneth J Pienta4, Martin A Lodge1, Michael A Gorin5,6, Martin G Pomper1,4, Steven P Rowe1,4.
Abstract
PURPOSE: Prostate-specific membrane antigen (PSMA) positron emission tomography (PET) is emerging as an important modality for imaging patients with prostate cancer (PCa). As with any imaging modality, indeterminate findings will arise. The PSMA reporting and data system (PSMA-RADS) version 1.0 codifies indeterminate soft tissue findings with the PSMA-RADS-3A moniker. We investigated the role of point-spread function (PSF) reconstructions on categorization of PSMA-RADS-3A lesions.Entities:
Keywords: positron emission tomography; prostate-specific membrane antigen; reporting and data system
Year: 2021 PMID: 33917238 PMCID: PMC8067967 DOI: 10.3390/diagnostics11040665
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Diagnostics (Basel) ISSN: 2075-4418
Treatment data from patients included in this study.
| Therapy | Percent |
|---|---|
| Pre-Scan Therapy | |
| - Prostatectomy | 70% |
| - Radiation | 36% |
| - Salvage Radiation | 30% |
| - Brachytherapy | 3% |
| - Cryoablation | 3% |
| - ADT | 30% |
| - Salvage PLND | 3% |
| - None | 13% |
| Post-Scan Therapy | |
| - Prostatectomy | 7% |
| - Cryoablation | 3% |
| - Radiation | 23% |
| - ADT | 60% |
| - Salvage PLND | 7% |
| - Chemotherapy | 20% |
| - Observation | 13% |
Abbreviations: ADT = androgen deprivation therapy; PLND = pelvic lymph node dissection.
Figure 1A 68-year-old man with history of prostatectomy and adjuvant chemohormonal therapy, now with an increase in prostate-specific antigen (PSA) to 0.3. (A) 18F-DCFPyL positron emission tomography (PET) and (B) PET/computed tomography (CT) axial images without point-spread function (PSF) demonstrating bilateral PSMA-RADS-3A pelvic lymph nodes (thin and thick red arrows, maximum standardized uptake value (SUVmax) 1.2 on the right and 1.5 on the left). (C) 18F-DCFPyL PET and (D) PET/CT axial images with PSF show that the right pelvic PSMA-RADS-3A lymph node does not appear significantly more conspicuous (SUVmax 2.2) and that lesion was not re-categorized. However, the lymph node on the left (SUVmax 2.5) was thought to be more conspicuous and was re-categorized to PSMA-RADS-4.
Figure 2Bar graph representation of medians and interquartile ranges for the SUVmax-lesion and SUVmax-lesion/SUVmean-blood-pool metrics of the PSMA-RADS-3A lesions included in this study. In each bar of the graph, the top number is the median and the interquartile ranges are listed below. Note the trends towards higher SUVs of the lesions that were re-categorized as PSMA-RADS-4 (dark grey), although none of these relationships reached statistical significance (i.e., all p > 0.05). SUV = standardized uptake value; nPSF = non-point-spread function; BP = blood-pool; PSF = point-spread function; LN = lymph node.
Figure 3Distributions of SUVmax-lesion and SUVmax-lesion/SUVmean-blood-pool for the different categories of lymph nodes included in this study. The outlier high uptake values were related to overlap of other high uptake structures in the manual segmentations of the lesions. SUV = standardized uptake value; nPSF = non-point-spread function; BP = blood-pool; PSF = point-spread function; LN = lymph node.