PET/CT for prostate ca influences staging, treatment strategy

Publication
Article
Oncology NEWS InternationalOncology NEWS International Vol 17 No 12
Volume 17
Issue 12

CHICAGO-Prostate-specific antigen measurements are considered a useful organ-specific marker, but they are not necessarily an adequate tumor marker. PET/CT in combination with PSA levels can play a significant role in detecting and staging prostate cancer, according to two presentations at RSNA 2008 (abstracts SSA18-02 and SSA18-09).

ABSTRACT: Prostate cancer represents nearly 12% of the patients enrolled in the National Oncologic PET Registry. New studies offer insight into how PET imaging affects diagnostic and treatment decisions.

CHICAGO-Prostate-specific antigen measurements are considered a useful organ-specific marker, but they are not necessarily an adequate tumor marker. PET/CT in combination with PSA levels can play a significant role in detecting and staging prostate cancer, according to two presentations at RSNA 2008 (abstracts SSA18-02 and SSA18-09).

Nghi Nguyen, MD, PhD, presented his multi-institutional group’s work on the utility of PET/CT in staging and restaging prostate cancer. Dr. Nguyen is from St. Louis University Hospital, where the research was conducted. The study’s lead author, Kahlid Taalab, Jr., MD, is now based in Cairo.

For this retrospective research, 21 prostate cancer patients underwent FDG-PET/CT studies for staging and 29 had restaging. For recurrence, PSA was defined as greater than 0.4 in patients with prior radical prostatectomy and greater than 1.0 in patients who had undergone prior hormonal therapy, radiation therapy, or chemotherapy.

The scans were reviewed by two nuclear medicine physicians, with a third reading if the findings were equivocal. The reference standard was histopathology, clinical, or imaging follow-up.

The results indicated that PET/CT correctly identified prostate cancer or metastases in 48% of the patients who were imaged for staging purposes. In the 29 who underwent restaging, three were deemed tumor-free, while 26 were considered clinically suspicious for recurrent disease.

Of these 26, PET/CT was false negative in 35% of the cases but suspicious for cancer in 65%. Of the 17 patients with these suspicious findings, malignancy was confirmed in 42%. Of the total 50 patients, PET/CT revealed a second, previously unknown cancer in 8%.

In a second report, Carlos Trampal, MD, and colleagues at the Instituto d’Alta Tecnologica in Barcelona evaluated the usefulness of carbon- 11 choline PET/CT for detecting recurrent prostate cancer in patients with increased serum PSA levels.

“Serum PSA level is the most sensitive tool for [detecting] prostate cancer recurrence, but it’s not able to identify the signs of recurrence,” Dr. Trampal said. “In addition, conventional imaging techniques have low sensitivity for detecting prostate recurrence. PET with C-11 choline has shown promising results for detecting recurrent cancer.”

The patient population consisted of 13 men with clinically elevated serum PSA (mean of 17.92 ng/mL). Whole-body PET/CT scans were done aft er a 740-MBq injection of C-11 choline. Imaging findings were classified as positive or negative based on pathologic tracer uptake using visual and semiquantitative analysis, Dr. Trampal said. PET results were validated with histology or clinical/radiological follow-up.

PET/CT with C-11 choline showed pathological uptake consistent with recurrence in nine patients. Among the nine, five had local recurrence, three had distant disease, and one patient had local recurrence plus multiple nodal involvment.

Based on the PET findings, patients were sent for either localized radiation treatment or systemic therapy (hormonal or chemotherapy). Dr. Trampal reported that all patients showed decrease in serum PSA levels after treatment. PET results were negative in four patients who did not receive treatment, and no evidence of recurrence was seen on follow-up between six and 12 months.

Overall, C-11 choline detected disease in 87.5% of the patients with a PSA level that was greater than 3 ng/mL and in 40% of the patients with a PSA level of less than or equal to 3 ng/mL.

RSNA attendee Hossein Jadvar, MD, PhD, of USC’s Keck School of Medicine, asked Dr. Trampal how his group verified their results because PSA decline alone may not be a reliable measurement since other pathologies can also cause a PSA drop. RSNA session comoderator Donald Podoloff , MD, added that biopsy was the only reliable way to confirm recurrence.

Dr. Trampal responded that his group was able to avoid biopsy in three patients with suspicion of local recurrence and successfully relied on the PET results along with the decline in PSA.

Related Videos
Rohit Gosain, MD; Rahul Gosain, MD; and Rana R. McKay, MD, presenting slides
Rohit Gosain, MD; Rahul Gosain, MD; and Rana R. McKay, MD, presenting slides
Rohit Gosain, MD; Rahul Gosain, MD; and Rana R. McKay, MD, presenting slides
Rohit Gosain, MD; Rahul Gosain, MD; and Rana R. McKay, MD, presenting slides
Anemia in patients who receive talazoparib plus enzalutamide for metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer appears to be manageable without any compromises in patient-reported outcomes and quality of life.
Artificial intelligence models may be “seamlessly incorporated” into clinical workflow in the management of prostate cancer, says Eric Li, MD.
Robust genetic testing guidelines in the prostate cancer space must be supported by strong clinical research before they can be properly implemented, says William J. Catalona, MD.
Financial constraints and a lack of education among some patients and providers must be addressed to improve the real-world use of certain prostate cancer therapies, says Neeraj Agarwal, MD.
Novel anti-PSMA monoclonal antibody rosopatamab is capable of carrying a bigger payload of radiation particles, which may potentially reduce doses for patients with prostate cancer, says Neeraj Agarwal, MD.
Related Content