Woo Sungmin, Becker Anton S, Leithner Doris, Mayerhoefer Marius E, Friedman Kent P, Tong Angela, Wise David R, Taneja Samir S, Zelefsky Michael J, Vargas Hebert A
Department of Radiology, Oncologic Imaging Division, NYU Langone Health, New York, NY, USA.
Department of Radiology, Nuclear Medicine Division, NYU Langone Health, New York, NY, USA.
Eur Radiol. 2025 Jan 24. doi: 10.1007/s00330-025-11358-x.
An increasing number of patients with prostate cancer (PCa) undergo assessment with magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and prostate-specific membrane antigen positron emission tomography/computed tomography (PSMA-PET/CT). This offers comprehensive multimodality staging but can lead to discrepancies. The objective was to assess the rates and types of discordance between MRI and PSMA-PET/CT for primary PCa assessment.
Consecutive men diagnosed with intermediate and high-risk PCa who underwent MRI and PSMA-PET/CT in 2021-2023 were retrospectively included. MRI and PSMA-PET/CT were interpreted using PI-RADS v2.1 and PRIMARY scores. Discordances between the two imaging modalities were categorized as "minor" (larger or additional lesion seen on one modality) or "major" (positive on only one modality or different index lesions between MRI and PSMA-PET/CT) and reconciled using radical prostatectomy or biopsy specimens.
Three hundred and nine men (median age 69 years, interquartile range (IQR) 64-75) were included. Most had Gleason Grade Group ≥ 3 PCa (70.9% (219/309)). Median PSA was 9.0 ng/mL (IQR 5.6-13.6). MRI and PSMA-PET/CT were concordant in 157/309 (50.8%) and discordant in 152/309 (49.1%) patients; with 39/152 (25.7%) major and 113/152 (74.3%) minor discordances. Of 27 patients with lesions only seen on MRI, 85.2% (23/27) were clinically significant PCa (csPCa). Of 23 patients with lesions only seen on PSMA-PET/CT, 78.3% (18/23) were csPCa. Altogether, lesions seen on only one modality were csPCa in 80.0% (36/45).
MRI and PSMA-PET/CT were discordant in half of patients for primary PCa evaluation, with major discrepancies seen in roughly one out of eight patients.
Question While both MRI and PSMA-PET/CT can be used for primary tumor assessment, the discordances between them are not well established. Findings MRI and PSMA-PET/CT were discordant in about half of the patients. Most prostate lesions seen on only one modality were significant cancer. Clinical relevance MRI and PSMA-PET/CT are often discordant for assessing the primary prostate tumor. Using both modalities for primary prostate tumor evaluation can provide complementary information that may substantially impact treatment planning.
越来越多的前列腺癌(PCa)患者接受磁共振成像(MRI)和前列腺特异性膜抗原正电子发射断层扫描/计算机断层扫描(PSMA-PET/CT)评估。这提供了全面的多模态分期,但可能导致差异。目的是评估MRI和PSMA-PET/CT在原发性PCa评估中的不一致率和类型。
回顾性纳入2021年至2023年连续诊断为中高危PCa并接受MRI和PSMA-PET/CT检查的男性患者。MRI和PSMA-PET/CT分别采用PI-RADS v2.1和PRIMARY评分进行解读。两种成像方式之间的不一致分为“轻微”(一种方式上看到更大或额外的病变)或“严重”(仅在一种方式上为阳性或MRI和PSMA-PET/CT之间的索引病变不同),并通过根治性前列腺切除术或活检标本进行核对。
纳入309名男性(中位年龄69岁,四分位间距(IQR)64-75)。大多数患者为Gleason分级组≥3的PCa(70.9%(219/309))。中位前列腺特异性抗原(PSA)为9.0 ng/mL(IQR 5.6-13.6)。MRI和PSMA-PET/CT在157/309(50.8%)的患者中结果一致,在152/309(49.1%)的患者中结果不一致;其中39/152(25.7%)为严重不一致,113/152(74.3%)为轻微不一致。在仅MRI上发现病变的27名患者中,85.2%(23/27)为临床显著前列腺癌(csPCa)。在仅PSMA-PET/CT上发现病变的23名患者中,78.3%(18/23)为csPCa。总体而言,仅在一种方式上发现的病变中,80.0%(36/45)为csPCa。
在原发性PCa评估中,MRI和PSMA-PET/CT在一半的患者中结果不一致,约八分之一的患者存在严重差异。
问题 虽然MRI和PSMA-PET/CT均可用于原发性肿瘤评估,但它们之间的不一致情况尚未明确。发现 MRI和PSMA-PET/CT在约一半的患者中结果不一致。大多数仅在一种方式上发现的前列腺病变为显著癌症。临床意义 MRI和PSMA-PET/CT在评估原发性前列腺肿瘤时经常不一致。使用两种方式进行原发性前列腺肿瘤评估可提供互补信息,可能对治疗计划产生重大影响。