In prostate cancer patients experiencing recurrence following a radical prostatectomy, imaging with 18F-DCFPyL PSMA PET/CT has been shown to considerably improve detection of active disease as compared to imaging with CT alone. As reported in the September issue of the Journal of Nuclear Medicine, detailed PET/CT scans resulted in a change in treatment plans for nearly 50% of patients.
Prostate specific antigen (PSA) recurrence—defined as a PSA level higher than 0.2ng/mL—occurs in 20 to 50% of all radical prostatectomy cases. In more than half of these patients, subsequent treatment with salvage radiotherapy (most commonly to the prostate bed) results in five-year biochemical control.
“For those patients who are experiencing a recurrence, it’s important to determine exactly where the cancer has spread so that it can be treated effectively with salvage radiotherapy,” said Michael Ng, MBBS (Hons), FRANZCR, radiation oncologist at GenesisCare St Vincent’s Hospital in Melbourne, Australia. “We know that prostate specific membrane antigen (PSMA) radiotracers have increased sensitivity in the detection of prostate cancer compared to conventional imaging. In this study we assessed the management impact of a novel PSMA tracer, 18F-DCFPyL PSMA PET/CT, in patients being considered for salvage radiotherapy.”
This study included 100 patients presenting with a detectable PSA following radical prostatectomy. Following patient registration and prior to any imaging, radiation oncologists outlined each patient’s “original intent” treatment plan on a questionnaire. All patients then underwent diagnostic CT and 18F-DCFPyL PSMA PET/CT. The CT results were released first, and a second “post-CT intent” questionnaire was completed. Next, the 18F-DCFPyL PSMA PET/CT results were released and a final “post-PSMA intent” questionnaire was completed. Change in management was graded based on impact and defined as major, minor, or no change demonstrated.
18F-DCFPyL PSMA PET/CT detected disease in 46.9% of patients compared to 15.5% on diagnostic CT. Major changes in the treatment plan were more likely to occur after PSMA imaging (12.5%) than after CT imaging (3.2%), and moderate changes were noted in 31.3% of patients after PSMA imaging versus 13.7% after CT imaging. The most common changes were recommendations for additional treatment, such as elective pelvic radiation, nodal boost, or concurrent androgen deprivation therapy.
Follow-up data were available at 18 months for 59 of the individuals in the study. At that timepoint, 92.5% had a PSA of below 0.20ng/mL and 74.5% had an undetectable (less than 0.03ng/mL) PSA.
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