TY - JOUR
T1 - Long-term Results of a Comparative PET/CT and PET/MRI Study of C-11-Acetate and F-18-Fluorocholine for Restaging of Early Recurrent Prostate Cancer
AU - Lamanna, Giorgio
AU - Tabouret-Viaud, Claire
AU - Rager, Olivier
AU - Jorcano, Sandra
AU - Vees, Hans Joerg
AU - Seimbille, Yann
AU - Zaidi, Habib
AU - Ratib, Osman
AU - Buchegger, Franz
AU - Miralbell, Raymond
AU - Zilli, Thomas
AU - Garibotto, Valentina
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2017 Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc. All rights reserved.
PY - 2017/5
Y1 - 2017/5
N2 - Purpose: The aims of this study were to assess the intraindividual performance of F-18-fluorocholine (FCH) and C-11-acetate (ACE) PET studies for restaging of recurrent prostate cancer (PCa), to correlate PET findings with long-term clinical and imaging follow-up, and to evaluate the impact of PET results on patient management.Methods: Thirty-three PCa patients relapsing after radical prostatectomy (n = 10, prostate-specific antigen [PSA] <= 3 ng/mL), primary radiotherapy (n = 8, prostate-specific antigen = 5 ng/mL), or radical prostatectomy + salvage radiotherapy (n = 15) underwent ACE and FCH PET-CT (n = 29) or PET-MRI (n = 4) studies in a randomized sequence 0 to 21 days apart.Results: The detection rate for ACE was 66% and for FCH was 60%. Results were concordant in 79% of the cases (26/33) and discordant in 21% (retroperitoneal, n = 5; pararectal, n = 1; and external iliac nodes, n = 1). After a median FU of 41 months (n = 32, 1 patient lost to FU), the site of relapse was correctly identified by ACE and FCH in 53% (17/32) and 47% (15/32) of the patients, respectively (2M1a patients ACE+/FCH-), whereas in 6 of 32 patients the relapse was not localized. Treatment approach was changed in 11 (34.4%) of 32 patients and 9 (28%) of 32 patients restaged with ACE and FCH PET, respectively.Conclusions: In early recurrent PCa, ACE and FCH showed minor discrepancies, limited to nodal staging and mainly in the retroperitoneal area, with true positivity of PET findings confirmed in half of the cases during FU. Treatment approach turned out to be influenced by ACE or FCH PET studies in one third of the patients.
AB - Purpose: The aims of this study were to assess the intraindividual performance of F-18-fluorocholine (FCH) and C-11-acetate (ACE) PET studies for restaging of recurrent prostate cancer (PCa), to correlate PET findings with long-term clinical and imaging follow-up, and to evaluate the impact of PET results on patient management.Methods: Thirty-three PCa patients relapsing after radical prostatectomy (n = 10, prostate-specific antigen [PSA] <= 3 ng/mL), primary radiotherapy (n = 8, prostate-specific antigen = 5 ng/mL), or radical prostatectomy + salvage radiotherapy (n = 15) underwent ACE and FCH PET-CT (n = 29) or PET-MRI (n = 4) studies in a randomized sequence 0 to 21 days apart.Results: The detection rate for ACE was 66% and for FCH was 60%. Results were concordant in 79% of the cases (26/33) and discordant in 21% (retroperitoneal, n = 5; pararectal, n = 1; and external iliac nodes, n = 1). After a median FU of 41 months (n = 32, 1 patient lost to FU), the site of relapse was correctly identified by ACE and FCH in 53% (17/32) and 47% (15/32) of the patients, respectively (2M1a patients ACE+/FCH-), whereas in 6 of 32 patients the relapse was not localized. Treatment approach was changed in 11 (34.4%) of 32 patients and 9 (28%) of 32 patients restaged with ACE and FCH PET, respectively.Conclusions: In early recurrent PCa, ACE and FCH showed minor discrepancies, limited to nodal staging and mainly in the retroperitoneal area, with true positivity of PET findings confirmed in half of the cases during FU. Treatment approach turned out to be influenced by ACE or FCH PET studies in one third of the patients.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85013997332&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1097/RLU.0000000000001609
DO - 10.1097/RLU.0000000000001609
M3 - Article
C2 - 28240662
AN - SCOPUS:85013997332
SN - 0363-9762
VL - 42
SP - e242-e246
JO - Clinical Nuclear Medicine
JF - Clinical Nuclear Medicine
IS - 5
ER -