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PCa Commentary
 

Modified PSA Guidelines For Bone Scanning (October 2006)

There is general consensus that at the initial diagnosis of prostate cancer the Technetium-99M bone scan has a low efficiency - about 1% - for detecting metastatic cancer when PSA values are less than 20 ng/mL. However, there is data that indicates that in presentations with Gleason scores >8 this level might better be lowered so that bone scanning may be safely avoided at PSA values of <10 ng/mL. An entirely different issue is what is the diagnostic efficiency of the Technetium scan in the diagnosis of bone metastases when the disease is recurrent after primary surgical or irradiation treatment?

This issue was addressed by Chodak, Iverson, McLeod et al. in J. Urol., July 2006: "Are Bone Scans Necessary in Men With Low Prostate Specific Antigen Levels Following Localized Therapy?". Their data base was the Early Prostate Cancer trial comparing treatment with bicalutamide (4052 men) to a placebo (4061 men) in men diagnosed with T1-4, MO and N+, N-, or Nx disease. Serial bone scans (a total of 10,389) were performed at approximately yearly intervals regardless of PSA levels. Results: "In the groups treated with radiation therapy or radical prostatectomy, regardless of the addition of bicalutamide, the incidence of positive bone scans was low (0.2% to 1.4%) at prostate specific antigen levels of less then 5 ng/mL". Specifically, for the placebo-treated RP group with PSA levels of <5 ng/mL only 15 of 2465 (0.6%) scans were positive. In the bicalutamide-treated post-RP group 5 of 2594 (0.2%) were positive. In the radiation therapy cohort receiving the placebo 9 of 643 (1.4%) showed positive scans, and in the bicalutamide treatment RT group 7 of 794 (0.9%) scans were positive at PSA level of < 5 ng/mL. A "watchful waiting" group was included in the trial and also received  bicalutamide vs. placebo. In this cohort the positive bone scan rate for PSA values <5 ng/mL was 0.7% vs. 1.3%, respectively; and for PSA range 5 - 10 ng/mL, 2.3% vs. 2.2%; and for PSA range 10-20 ng/mL, 3.2% vs. 1.4% - for an overall positivity of less than 2%. The data from the "watchful waiting" group led the authors to conclude that the level below which a bone scan may be omitted "can be increased to 20 ng/mL with caution in those patients treated with watchful waiting".

This study deserves credibility since it is the largest of its kind addressing this issue, and in the authors' opinion "provides sufficient support for clinicians to eliminate routine bone scans in patients [after primary therapy] with PSA less than 5 ng/mL".

In the JCO, March 20,2005, article Kattan et al.,"Pattern of Prostate -Specific Antigen (PSA) Failure Dictates the Probability of a Positive Bone Scan in Patients With an Increasing PSA After Radical Prostatectomy", reported that the PSA level [as discussed above] and post-treatment PSAV were the only significant predictors of a positive scan. The median PSAV for positive scans was 1.4 ng/mL/mo vs. 0.12 ng/mL/mo for negative results. Based on their data a multi-parameter nomogram was constructed to predict the likelihood of a positive bone scan.

However, with the increasing use and increased specificity and sensitivity of the newer non-specific bone tracer, 18F-Fluoride, results from studies using Fluoride-18 PET/CT for skeletal evaluation will likely lead to revised parameters for bone scanning. Comparison analyses between the planar scan using the Technetium tracer and the F-18 PET/CT have shown that the F-18 radioisotope provides improved spacial resolution ( to about 5-6 mm ), and the associated CT offers more precise anatomic correlation and structural detail. The current combination of the two in a single procedure offers a more confident differentiation between benign and malignant lesions. It is very likely that a lower value will be established for the PSA level at which scanning provides informative results. In a 2006 review of the new tracers for scanning in Seminars in Nuclear Medicine, Langsteger et al, conclude "Therefore, in high risk patients (GsC >7 or PSA doubling time < 3 months) we recommend 18F-fluoride PET/CT and not BS as the primary staging procedure". 

It is possible that even further changes are afoot in bone scanning  technique. Dr. David Djang, Seattle Nuclear Medicine, commented, "The anatomy is so good with the F-18 PET that I feel adding the CT gains nothing or extremely little for anatomical localization. There are some lytic lesion that will show better on CT, but this is hardly ever the case with the blastic lesions of prostate cancer. With F-18 PET's greater accuracy compared to traditional bone scans, I suggest that far fewer MRIs would be necessary for confirmation/exclusion of disease, and omitting the CT would save the system money."

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(c) 2006 Seattle Prostate Institute -  All rights reserved.