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[Zr]Zr-PSMA-617 PET/CT Characterization of Indeterminate [Ga]Ga-PSMA-11 PET/CT Findings in Patients with Biochemical Recurrence of Prostate Cancer: Lesion-based Analysis

Overview
Journal Cancer Imaging
Publisher Springer Nature
Specialties Oncology
Radiology
Date 2024 Feb 23
PMID 38389092
Authors
Affiliations
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Abstract

Background: The state-of-the-art method for imaging men with biochemical recurrence of prostate cancer (BCR) is prostate-specific membrane antigen (PSMA)-targeted positron emission tomography/computed tomography (PET/CT) with tracers containing short-lived radionuclides, e.g., gallium-68 (Ga; half-life: ∼67.7 min). However, such imaging not infrequently yields indeterminate findings, which remain challenging to characterize. PSMA-targeted tracers labeled with zirconium-89 (Zr; half-life: ∼78.41 h) permit later scanning, which may help in classifying the level of suspiciousness for prostate cancer of lesions previously indeterminate on conventional PSMA-targeted PET/CT.

Methods: To assess the ability of [Zr]Zr-PSMA-617 PET/CT to characterize such lesions, we retrospectively analyzed altogether 20 lesions that were indeterminate on prior [Ga]Ga-PSMA-11 PET/CT, in 15 men with BCR (median prostate-specific antigen: 0.70 ng/mL). The primary endpoint was the lesions' classifications, and secondary endpoints included [Zr]Zr-PSMA-617 uptake (maximum standardized uptake value [SUV]), and lesion-to-background ratio (tumor-to-liver ratio of the SUV [TLR]). [Zr]Zr-PSMA-617 scans were performed 1 h, 24 h, and 48 h post-injection of 123 ± 19 MBq of radiotracer, 35 ± 35 d post-[Ga]Ga-PSMA-11 PET/CT.

Results: Altogether, 6/20 previously-indeterminate lesions (30%) were classified as suspicious (positive) for prostate cancer, 14/20 (70%), as non-suspicious (negative). In these two categories, [Zr]Zr-PSMA-617 uptake and lesional contrast showed distinctly different patterns. In positive lesions, SUV and TLR markedly rose from 1 to 48 h, with SUV essentially plateauing at high levels, and TLR further steeply increasing, from 24 to 48 h. In negative lesions, uptake, when present, was very low, and decreasing, while contrast was minimal, from 1 to 48 h. No adverse events or clinically-relevant vital signs changes related to [Zr]Zr-PSMA-617 PET/CT were noted during or ~ 4 weeks after the procedure.

Conclusions: In men with BCR, [Zr]Zr-PSMA-617 PET/CT may help characterize as suspicious or non-suspicious for prostate cancer lesions that were previously indeterminate on [Ga]Ga-PSMA-11 PET/CT.

Trial Registration: Not applicable.

Citing Articles

Outstanding increase in tumor-to-background ratio over time allows tumor localization by [Zr]Zr-PSMA-617 PET/CT in early biochemical recurrence of prostate cancer.

Burgard C, Rosar F, Larsen E, Khreish F, Linxweiler J, Marlowe R Cancer Imaging. 2024; 24(1):132.

PMID: 39375762 PMC: 11457487. DOI: 10.1186/s40644-024-00778-5.

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