Can 68Ga‐PSMA positron emission tomography and multiparametric MRI guide treatment for biochemical recurrence after radical prostatectomy?

Author:

Khanna Yash12ORCID,Chinni Vidyasagar34ORCID,Gnanasambantham Kavitha1,O'Sullivan Richard5,Ballok Zita E.5,Ryan Andrew6,Ramdave Shakher2,Sivaratnam Dinesh7,Bowden Patrick8,Guerrieri Mario9,Ranasinghe Weranja K.B.1210ORCID,Frydenberg Mark317

Affiliation:

1. Department of Surgery, Faculty of Medicine, Nursing and Health Sciences Monash University Melbourne Vic. Australia

2. Monash Health Clayton Vic. Australia

3. Australian Urology Associates Malvern Vic. Australia

4. Northern Health Epping Vic. Australia

5. Healthcare Imaging Richmond Vic. Australia

6. TissuPath Mount Waverley Vic. Australia

7. Cabrini Institute Cabrini Health Malvern Vic. Australia

8. Icon Cancer Centre Richmond Vic. Australia

9. GenesisCare Footscray Vic. Australia

10. Austin Health Heidelberg Vic. Australia

Abstract

ObjectiveTo evaluate the role of multiparametric magnetic resonance imaging (mpMRI) and Gallium‐68 (68Ga)‐prostate‐specific membrane antigen (PSMA) positron emission tomography (PET)/computed tomography (CT) in guiding salvage therapy for patients with biochemical recurrence (BCR) post‐radical prostatectomy.Patients and MethodsPatients were evaluated with paired mpMRI and 68Ga‐PSMA PET/CT scans for BCR (prostate‐specific antigen [PSA] >0.2 ng/mL). Patient, tumour, PSA and imaging characteristics were analysed with descriptive statistics.ResultsA total of 117 patients underwent paired scans to investigate BCR, of whom 53.0% (62/117) had detectable lesions on initial scans and 47.0% (55/117) did not. Of those without detectable lesions, 8/55 patients proceeded to immediate salvage radiotherapy (sRT) and 47/55 were observed. Of patients with negative imaging who were initially observed, 46.8% (22/47) did not reach threshold for repeat imaging, while 53.2% were rescanned due to rising PSA levels. Of these rescanned patients, 31.9% (15/47) were spared sRT due to proven distant disease, or due to absence of disease on repeat imaging. Of the original 117 patients, 53 (45.3%) were spared early sRT due to absence of disease on imaging or presence of distant disease, while those undergoing delayed sRT still maintained good PSA responses. Of note, patients with high‐risk features who underwent sRT despite negative imaging demonstrated satisfactory PSA responses to sRT. Study limitations include the observational design and absence of cause‐specific or overall survival data.ConclusionOur findings support the use of mpMRI and 68Ga‐PSMA PET/CT in guiding timing and necessity of salvage therapy tailored to detected lesions, with potential to reduce unnecessary sRT‐related morbidity. Larger or randomized trials are warranted to validate this.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Urology

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