Figure 2: Imaging of 58-year-old man after radical prostatectomy for
pT2a pN0 prostate cancer and negative margins, followed by salvage radiotherapy
to prostate bed one year later. (A) Maximum-intensity-projection image of
initial 18F-DCFPyL (PSMA) PET scan performed after biochemical failure
(serum PSA level, 0.57 ng/mL) shows physiologic distribution of radiotracer
with no evidence of locoregional or distant recurrence. Patient was observed
after baseline PET. (B) Repeat PSMA PET scan one year later (inPET2) was
performed with serum PSA level of 2.72 ng/mL, PSA velocity of 0.2 ng/mL/mo, and PSA doubling time of 5.3 mo.
Maximum-intensity-projection image of inPET2 shows solitary focus of
radiotracer uptake at L1. (C) Axial 18F-DCFPyL PET (right), fused PET/CT
(middle), and CT (left) images from inPET2 show focus of radiotracer uptake at
L1 vertebral body (SUVmax, 7.7; PSMA score, 2) with
corresponding small osteoblastic lesion on CT, in keeping with metastatic
deposit. Management was changed from observation to stereotactic radiotherapy
to skeletal deposit.
The authors of “Utility of PSMA PET/CT After
an Initial Negative Scan: Results from a Prospective Multicenter PSMA PET
Registry” include Ur Metser, University Medical
Imaging Toronto, Joint Department of Medical Imaging: University Health
Network, Sinai Health Systems, Women’s College Hospital, Toronto, Ontario,
Canada, and Department of Medical Imaging, University of Toronto, Toronto,
Ontario, Canada; Glenn Baumann, Department of Oncology, Western University,
London, Ontario, Canada; Mohammed Rashid and Bo Green, Quality Measurement and
Evaluation, Ontario Health (Cancer Care Ontario), Toronto, Ontario, Canada;
Seyed Ali Mirshahvalad, University Medical Imaging Toronto, Joint Department of
Medical Imaging: University Health Network, Sinai Health Systems, Women’s
College Hospital, Toronto, Ontario, Canada, and Department of Medical Imaging,
Health Sciences North, Northern Ontario School of Medicine University, Sudbury,
Ontario, Canada; Andres Kohan, University Medical Imaging Toronto, Joint
Department of Medical Imaging: University Health Network, Sinai Health Systems,
Women’s College Hospital, Toronto, Ontario, Canada; Rosanna Chan, Medical
Imaging and PET Clinical Programs, Ontario Health (Cancer Care Ontario),
Toronto, Ontario, Canada; and Robert Hamilton, Division of Urology,
Department of Surgery, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
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