The role of histopathological and biochemical parameters for predicting metastatic disease on 68 Ga‐PSMA‐11 PET in prostate cancer

Autor: Uğuray Aydos, Ümit Özgür Akdemir, İpek Işık Gönül, Serhat Çetin, Sinan Sozen, Lütfiye Özlem Atay, Murat Yavuz Koparal, Ozlem Gulbahar, Fırat Çağlar Budak, Seda Gülbahar Ateş
Rok vydání: 2021
Předmět:
Zdroj: The Prostate. 81:1337-1348
ISSN: 1097-0045
0270-4137
Popis: Background The aim of this study was to evaluate the role of histopathological and biochemical parameters in the prediction of the presence and number of PSMA positive lesions consistent with the metastatic spread of prostate cancer on Ga-68-PSMA PET images. Methods Biochemical, histopathological and imaging data of 302 prostate cancer patients who underwent Ga-68-PSMA-11 PET/CT or PET/MR imaging for primary staging were retrospectively analyzed. Patients were divided into two groups as "PET positive" and "PET negative" according to the presence of pathologic extraprostatic PSMA involvement. "PET positive" patients were additionally divided into two groups: oligometastatic (1-3 metastatic lesion) and multimetastatic (>3 metastatic lesions). Results The mean age of patients was 66.8 +/- 7.6 years. Imaging modality was PET/MR in 223 (73.8%) and PET/CT in 79 (26.2%) of patients. Total PSA, PSA density (PSAD), ALP, and tumor ratio in biopsy specimens were found to be significantly higher in "PET positive" group compared to "PET negative" group and in multimetastatic group compared to oligometastatic group. PET positivity was observed in 3.8% of the low-intermediate risk groups (ISUP 1-3 and total PSA 20 ng/ml or PSAD >= 0.15 ng/ml/cc) with a relative risk of 12 (p < .001). The prediction models to predict the PET positivity and the presence of distant metastasis had AUCs of 0.901 and 0.925, respectively; with ALP, total PSA, and tumor ratio in needle biopsy specimen as significant independent predictors (p < .05). Conclusions In this study, Ga-68-PSMA-11 PET positivity was significantly higher in the high-risk patient group than in the low-intermediate risk groups. The prediction models used for predicting the PET positivity and the presence of distant metastasis on PET imaging were successful with high discriminatory powers. In addition to total PSA and ISUP GG, ALP and tumor ratio in biopsy specimens can be used to identify high-risk patients.
Databáze: OpenAIRE