Single Lesion on Prostate-specific Membrane Antigen-ligand Positron Emission Tomography and Low Prostate-specific Antigen Are Prognostic Factors for a Favorable Biochemical Response to Prostate-specific Membrane Antigen-targeted Radioguided Surgery in Recurrent Prostate Cancer.

Details

Serval ID
serval:BIB_F8CC96E79923
Type
Article: article from journal or magazin.
Collection
Publications
Title
Single Lesion on Prostate-specific Membrane Antigen-ligand Positron Emission Tomography and Low Prostate-specific Antigen Are Prognostic Factors for a Favorable Biochemical Response to Prostate-specific Membrane Antigen-targeted Radioguided Surgery in Recurrent Prostate Cancer.
Journal
European urology
Author(s)
Horn T., Krönke M., Rauscher I., Haller B., Robu S., Wester H.J., Schottelius M., van Leeuwen FWB, van der Poel H.G., Heck M., Gschwend J.E., Weber W., Eiber M., Maurer T.
ISSN
1873-7560 (Electronic)
ISSN-L
0302-2838
Publication state
Published
Issued date
10/2019
Peer-reviewed
Oui
Volume
76
Number
4
Pages
517-523
Language
english
Notes
Publication types: Journal Article
Publication Status: ppublish
Abstract
Prostate-specific membrane antigen (PSMA)-ligand positron emission tomography (PET) allows detection of metastatic prostate cancer (PC) lesions at low prostate-specific antigen (PSA) values. To facilitate their intraoperative detection during salvage surgery, we recently introduced PSMA-targeted radioguided surgery (RGS).
To describe the outcome of a large cohort of patients treated with PSMA-targeted RGS and to establish prognostic factors.
A total of 121 consecutive patients with recurrent PC as defined by PSMA-ligand PET (median PSA: 1.13ng/ml) underwent PSMA-targeted RGS.
The frequency of a complete biochemical response (cBR; PSA <0.2ng/ml) without additional treatment and the duration of biochemical recurrence-free survival (bRFS, time from PSMA-targeted RGS with PSA <0.2ng/ml without further treatment) were evaluated and correlated with preoperatively available clinical variables.
In almost all patients (120/121, 99%) metastatic tissue could be removed. A cBR was achieved in 77 patients (66%). The chance of cBR was highest in patients with both low preoperative PSA and a single lesion (38/45: 84%). Median bRFS was 6.4mo in the whole patient cohort and 19.8mo for patients with cBR. Significantly longer median bRFS was observed in patients with a low preoperative PSA value (p=0.004, hazard ratio 1.48, 95% confidence interval 1.13-1.93) and with a single lesion in preoperative PSMA-ligand PET (14.0 vs 2.5mo, p=0.002).
PSMA-targeted RGS leads to a remarkable interval of bRFS in a subset of patients. The frequency of cBR and the duration of bRFS were highest in patients with a low preoperative PSA value and a single lesion on PSMA-ligand PET.
Prostate-specific membrane antigen radioguided surgery delays disease progression in selected patients with recurrent prostate cancer after radical prostatectomy. Patients with a single lesion of recurrence and a low prostate-specific antigen value had the best outcome.
Keywords
Aged, Antigens, Surface/blood, Glutamate Carboxypeptidase II/blood, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Neoplasm Recurrence, Local/blood, Neoplasm Recurrence, Local/diagnostic imaging, Neoplasm Recurrence, Local/mortality, Neoplasm Recurrence, Local/surgery, Positron-Emission Tomography/methods, Prognosis, Prostate-Specific Antigen/blood, Prostatic Neoplasms/blood, Prostatic Neoplasms/diagnostic imaging, Prostatic Neoplasms/mortality, Prostatic Neoplasms/surgery, Retrospective Studies, Surgery, Computer-Assisted, Survival Rate, Biochemical recurrence, Prostate-specific antigen, Prostate-specific membrane antigen, Radioguided surgery, Salvage surgery
Pubmed
Web of science
Create date
28/03/2022 15:13
Last modification date
05/04/2022 5:36
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