Affiliation:
1. From the Departments of Nuclear Medicine, Radiotherapy, and Urology and Clinical Division of Oncology, Department of Medicine I, Hospital Pharmacy of the General Hospital of Vienna, Medical University of Vienna, Vienna, Austria
Abstract
PurposeTo assess the clinical value of computed tomography (CT) and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) image fusion with11C-acetate (AC) positron emission tomography (PET) imaging for detection and exact location of clinically occult recurrences.Patients and MethodsFifty prostate cancer patients with elevated/increasing serum prostate-specific antigen levels after radical therapy underwent whole-body AC PET. Uptake was initially interpreted as normal, abnormal, or equivocal. In case of abnormal or equivocal uptake, additional conventional imaging techniques, such as CT, MRI, and bone scans, were performed. To precisely define the anatomic location of abnormal uptake and to improve characterization of equivocal lesions, a software-assisted image fusion (CT-PET, MRI-PET) was performed and evaluated as site-by-site analysis of 51 abnormal (n = 37) or equivocal (n = 14) sites of all 50 patients. In 17 patients, additional histopathologic evaluation was available.ResultsIn five (10%), 13 (26%), and 32 (64%) of the 50 patients, AC PET studies demonstrated AC uptake judged as normal, equivocal, and abnormal, respectively. Image fusion changed characterization of equivocal lesions as normal in five (10%) of 51 sites and abnormal in nine (18%) of 51 sites. It precisely defined the anatomic location of abnormal uptake in 37 (73%) of 51 sites. AC PET findings did influence patient management in 14 (28%) of 50 patients.ConclusionRetrospective fusion of AC PET and CT/MRI is feasible and seems to be essential for final diagnosis. This is particularly true in patients with AC uptake in the prostate region.
Publisher
American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO)
Cited by
97 articles.
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