Litcius/Paper detail

PSMA PET/CT for treatment response evaluation at predefined time points is superior to PSA response for predicting survival in metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer patients

Fleur Kleiburg, Lioe‐Fee de Geus‐Oei, Saskia Luelmo, Renske Spijkerman, Jelle J. Goeman, Frank Toonen, Frits Smit, Tom van der Hulle, Linda Heijmen

2024European Journal of Radiology20 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Background In metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer (mCRPC), using serum prostate-specific antigen (PSA) levels to evaluate treatment response is not always accurate. This study aimed to assess the efficacy of PSMA PET/CT at specific time points for evaluating treatment response and predicting survival in mCRPC patients, compared to PSA. Methods Sixty mCRPC patients underwent [ 18 F]PSMA-1007 PET/CT at baseline and for treatment response evaluation of either androgen receptor-targeted agents (after 3 months) or chemotherapy (after completion), and were retrospectively analysed. Visual assessment categorised overall response and response of the worst responding lesion as partial response, stable disease, or progressive disease, using the EAU/EANM criteria. Additionally, percentage changes in SUV max , total tumour volume and total lesion uptake (tumour volume * SUV mean ) were calculated. PSA response was defined according to the PCWG3 criteria. Cox regression analysis identified predictors of overall survival. Results PSMA PET/CT and PSA response were discordant in 47 % of patients, and PSMA PET/CT response was worse in 89 % of these cases. Overall response on PSMA PET/CT independently predicted overall survival (progression versus non-progression: HR = 4.05, p < 0.001), outperforming PSA response (progression versus non-progression: HR=2.53, p = 0.010) and other PSMA PET/CT parameters. Among patients with a PSA decline of > 50 %, 31 % showed progressive disease on PSMA PET/CT, correlating with higher mortality risk (progression versus non-progression: HR=4.38, p = 0.008). No flare in PSMA uptake was observed in this cohort. Conclusions PSMA PET/CT for assessing treatment response at predefined time points was superior to PSA-based response for predicting overall survival in mCRPC patients treated with androgen receptor-targeted agents and chemotherapy. PSMA PET/CT showed the ability to detect disease progression earlier than PSA levels, which can affect treatment decisions and has the potential to improve patient outcomes. We recommend further research to validate these findings in larger patient cohorts, to extend the number of treatments, and to evaluate cost-effectiveness and impact on patient outcomes.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineProstate cancerCastrationOncologyProstatePET-CTCancerInternal medicineUrologyNuclear medicinePositron emission tomographyHormoneProstate Cancer Treatment and ResearchRadiopharmaceutical Chemistry and ApplicationsProstate Cancer Diagnosis and Treatment