| Literature DB >> 35326513 |
Adam M Kase1, Winston Tan1, John A Copland2, Hancheng Cai3, Ephraim E Parent3, Ravi A Madan4.
Abstract
Conventional imaging has been the standard imaging modality for assessing prostate cancer recurrence and is utilized to determine treatment response to therapy. Molecular imaging with PSMA PET-CT has proven to be more accurate, sensitive, and specific at identifying pelvic or distant metastatic disease, resulting in earlier diagnosis of advanced disease. Since advanced disease may not be seen on conventional imaging, due to its lower sensitivity, but can be identified by molecular imaging, this reveals that metastatic prostate cancer occurs on a continuum from negative PSMA PET-CT and negative conventional imaging to positive PSMA PET-CT and positive conventional imaging. Understanding this continuum, the accuracy of these modalities, and treatment related outcomes based on imaging, will allow the clinician to counsel patients on management. This review will highlight the differences in conventional and molecular imaging in prostate cancer and how PSMA PET-CT can be used for the management of prostate cancer patients in different clinical scenarios, while providing cautionary notes for overtreatment.Entities:
Keywords: PSMA PET–CT; biochemical recurrent prostate cancer; conventional imaging; metastatic prostate cancer; molecular imaging; recurrent prostate cancer
Year: 2022 PMID: 35326513 PMCID: PMC8946297 DOI: 10.3390/cancers14061361
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancers (Basel) ISSN: 2072-6694 Impact factor: 6.639
Figure 1Continuum of metastatic disease in the setting of PSMA PET–CT.
Figure 2Summary of Clinical Scenarios [11,22,26,27,40]. The median metastasis free survival (mMFS) based on PSA DT for BCR prostate cancer and negative conventional imaging.