Purpose
This prospective study was aimed at assessing the ability of
99m
Tc-PSMA scan to detect bone metastases in prostate cancer (PCa) against
99m
Tc-MDP scan as a standard and assess the correlation of these modalities in PCa staging of bone involvement.
Patients and Methods
Forty-one patients (41) with histologically confirmed PCa were scanned using both methods. Planar imaging was performed with additional regional SPECT/CT 3 to 4 hours posttracer injection. Scans were reported as positive, negative, or equivocal. In the case of positive scans, lesions were quantified by each of the 3 reporters separately. Planar and SPECT/CT images were reported together to obtain the final report on each scan.
Results
Our preliminary results showed no significant difference in the detection of bone metastases between the 2 scans.
99m
Tc-PSMA detected 52 of the 55 bone lesions detected on
99m
Tc-MDP. However,
99m
Tc-PSMA provided extra information by reporting lymph nodal metastases in 7 patients and residual disease in the prostate in 2 patients with biochemical progression after radical therapy. In 1 patient, the PSMA scan resulted in change in management with patient now on
177
Lu-PSMA radioligand therapy. Equivocal findings were reported in 4 patients on
99m
Tc-MDP and none on
99m
Tc-PSMA.
Conclusions
99m
Tc-PSMA was comparable to
99m
Tc-MDP in detection of bone metastases and demonstrated an additional benefit of providing information on visceral disease.
99m
Tc-PSMA may be a better alternative to
99m
Tc-MDP in staging, restaging, and assessment of patients with biochemical progression after radical therapy of PCa in a resource-limited setup like ours while also assisting to detect patients eligible for PSMA-labeled radioligand therapy.
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