Back to Search Start Over

Ga-68-PSMA PET/CT in treatment-naïve patients with prostate cancer: Which clinical parameters and risk stratification systems best predict PSMA-positive metastases?

Authors :
Winfried Brenner
Christian Furth
Sebastian Zschaeck
Sefer Elezkurtaj
Alexander D. J. Baur
Bernd Hamm
Holger Amthauer
Julian M. M. Rogasch
Marcus R. Makowski
Hannes Cash
Source :
The Prostate.
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

To evaluate the accuracy of clinical parameters and established pre-treatment risk stratification systems for prostate cancer (PCa) in predicting PSMA-positive metastases in men undergoing Ga-68-PSMA PET/CT as initial staging examination.A retrospective analysis in 108 consecutive treatment-naïve patients with biopsy-proven PCa undergoing Ga-68-PSMA PET/CT (median age, 72 years [range, 49-82 years]) was performed. Prediction of PSMA-positive metastases by serum PSA, clinical T stage (cT), ISUP group, percentage of positive biopsy cores, and derived risk scores (D'Amico risk classification system, Roach [RF], Yale formula [YF], and Briganti nomogram [BN]) was examined with ROC analysis.Any PSMA-positive metastases were found in 36 of 108 patients, including LN metastases in 28 patients, extrapelvic LN metastases in 15 patients, and organ metastases in 19 patients (bone, 19; lung, 1). AUCs for PSA, cT, ISUP, and percentage of positive biopsy cores regarding PSMA-positive metastases did not differ significantly (range, 0.6-0.8; each P 0.05). D'Amico (AUC, 0.61-0.64) was inferior to RF (0.76-0.83), YF (0.81-0.86), and BN (0.73 to 0.88; each P 0.05). Among the 89 high-risk patients (D'Amico), decision for or against PET imaging based on RF (cut-off,18.0), YF (10.8), or BN (8.0) would have prevented PSMA PET/CT in 4 (5%), 15 (17%), or 18 patients (20%), respectively, while preserving a sensitivity ≥95% for PSMA-positive metastases.Clinical parameters and established risk stratification systems for PCa can predict Ga-68-PSMA PET-positive metastases in treatment-naïve patients. Especially YF and BN may improve identification of patients with the highest probability of metastatic disease detected by Ga-68-PSMA PET/CT.

Details

ISSN :
10970045
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The Prostate
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....81eca7ec8183d21db652233441b00dee