Georgetown University School of Medicine, Washington, DC, USA.
Department of Neurosurgery, Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center, New York, NY, USA.
J Neurooncol. 2023 Jun;163(2):455-462. doi: 10.1007/s11060-023-04355-x. Epub 2023 May 29.
Brain metastases are rare in patients with prostate cancer and portend poor outcome. Prostate-specific membrane antigen positron emission tomography (PSMA PET)/CT scans including the brain have identified incidental tumors. We sought to identify the incidental brain tumor detection rate of PSMA PET/CT performed at initial diagnosis or in the setting of biochemical recurrence.
An institutional database was queried for patients who underwent Ga-PSMA-11 or F-DCFPyL (F-piflufolastat) PET/CT imaging at an NCI-designated Comprehensive Cancer Center from 1/2018 to 12/2022. Imaging reports and clinical courses were reviewed to identify brain lesions and describe clinical and pathologic features.
Two-thousand seven hundred and sixty-three patients underwent 3363 PSMA PET/CT scans in the absence of neurologic symptoms. Forty-four brain lesions were identified, including 33 PSMA-avid lesions: 10 intraparenchymal metastases (30%), 4 dural-based metastases (12%), 16 meningiomas (48%), 2 pituitary macroadenomas (6%), and 1 epidermal inclusion cyst (3%) (incidences of 0.36, 0.14, 0.58, 0.07, and 0.04%). The mean parenchymal metastasis diameter and mean SUVmax were 1.99 cm (95%CI:1.25-2.73) and 4.49 (95%CI:2.41-6.57), respectively. At the time of parenchymal brain metastasis detection, 57% of patients had no concurrent extracranial disease, 14% had localized prostate disease only, and 29% had extracranial metastases. Seven of 8 patients with parenchymal brain metastases remain alive at a median 8.8 months follow-up.
Prostate cancer brain metastases are rare, especially in the absence of widespread metastatic disease. Nevertheless, incidentally detected brain foci of PSMA uptake may represent previously unknown prostate cancer metastases, even in small lesions and in the absence of systemic disease.
前列腺癌患者发生脑转移较为罕见,且预后不良。前列腺特异性膜抗原正电子发射断层扫描(PSMA PET/CT)包括脑部扫描可发现偶发肿瘤。我们旨在确定在初始诊断或生化复发时进行 PSMA PET/CT 检查时偶然发现脑肿瘤的检出率。
我们在国立癌症研究所指定的综合性癌症中心,对 2018 年 1 月至 2022 年 12 月期间接受 Ga-PSMA-11 或 F-DCFPyL(F-吡呋氟拉司他)PET/CT 成像的患者进行了一项机构数据库查询。回顾影像学报告和临床过程以确定脑部病变并描述临床和病理特征。
2763 例患者在无神经系统症状的情况下进行了 3363 次 PSMA PET/CT 扫描,共发现 44 个脑部病变,其中 33 个 PSMA 摄取病变:10 个脑实质转移(30%),4 个硬膜转移(12%),16 个脑膜瘤(48%),2 个垂体大腺瘤(6%)和 1 个表皮包涵囊肿(3%)(发生率分别为 0.36、0.14、0.58、0.07 和 0.04%)。脑实质转移的平均直径和平均 SUVmax 分别为 1.99cm(95%CI:1.25-2.73)和 4.49(95%CI:2.41-6.57)。在发现脑实质转移时,57%的患者无同时存在的颅外疾病,14%的患者仅有局限性前列腺疾病,29%的患者有颅外转移。8 例脑实质转移患者中有 7 例在中位随访 8.8 个月时仍存活。
前列腺癌脑转移较为罕见,尤其是在无广泛转移疾病的情况下。然而,偶然发现的 PSMA 摄取脑病灶可能代表以前未知的前列腺癌转移,即使是小病变且无全身疾病。