Abstract

Numerous different molecules of prostate-specific membrane antigen (PSMA) ligands are used to detect prostate cancer (PCa); most approaches utilize gallium PET and a few reports describe the role of SPECT/CT. [99mTc]Tc-PSMA-T4 is a new radiopharmaceutical designed for the diagnosis of patients with PCa. We conducted a single site, prospective, preliminary case series study that included 31 patients with PCa; all had undergone clinical, biochemical or imaging examination and exhibited clear or suspicious active disease or clinical/biochemical recurrence of PCa. Whole-body (WB) SPECT/CT after i.v. administration of [99mTc]Tc-PSMA-T4 was utilized; acquisition images were obtained at three time points. The clinical value of the images was assessed in regard to the evaluation of tumor extent in patients with confirmed PC that qualified for initial therapy and the evaluation of tumor recurrence; both provided encouraging results. The late acquisition of WB-SPECT resulted in better lesions delineation. The results of the analysis of the sensitivity/specificity were: 92%/100% in cases of primary cancer, 83%/100% in terms of pelvic lymph nodes disease, 100%/95% in other lymph nodes and soft tissue involvement, respectively, and bone mets were both 100%. An oncotropic SPECT [99mTc]Tc-PSMA-T4 can help in selecting a rational therapeutic strategy for a patient with an initial diagnosis of PCa by assessing the extent of cancer and also after complex radical or palliative therapy in case of biochemical recurrence for re-staging.

Highlights

  • 31 subjects were included in the study, all had pathological confirmation of prostate cancer (PCa), with a Gleason score from 6 to 10

  • prostate-specific membrane antigen (PSMA) is one of the most promising biomarkers in subjects with PCa, which are currently successfully used in routine clinical practice

  • The described preparations had some disadvantages, such as slow pharmacokinetics, high liver uptake, and slow clearance in the gastrointestinal tract, which can disrupt their application in prostate cancer (PC)

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Summary

Introduction

Optimal clinical decision-making for men with prostate cancer (PCa) requires the analysis of many factors, including prostate-specific antigen (PSA) assessment and performing different kinds of scans and other molecular or genetic testing. We are not able to distinguish between low and high-risk patients with PCa on the basis of PSA results only, so this biomarker cannot be used to select the most appropriate treatment for patients [1]. Current standard diagnostic imaging, including structural imaging (CT or MRI) and standard bone scan are not optimal for stage evaluation, in detecting aspects of local disease, lymphatic spread or assessment of distant metastatic disease.

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