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Newly developed PSG score improves patient selection for PSMA radiopharmaceutical therapy (Simple way to determine if a prostate cancer therapy will work)
Medical Xpress / Society of Nuclear Medicine and Molecular Imaging / Journal of Nuclear Medicine ^ | April 19, 2023 | Masatoshi Hotta et al

Posted on 04/24/2023 6:31:32 PM PDT by ConservativeMind

A newly established PSMA PET scoring system can successfully predict whether metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer (mCRPC) patients will respond to treatment with 177Lu-PSMA therapy. International, multicenter testing demonstrated the effectiveness of the tumor-to-salivary gland ratio (PSG score), which can easily be applied clinically with substantial reproducibility.

The recently FDA-approved radiopharmaceutical therapy 177Lu-PSMA has been shown to reduce the risk of death by 38 percent and the risk of progression by 60 percent in mCRPC patients. "Patients do not respond uniformly to this treatment, however," said Masatoshi Hotta, MD, Ph.D. "Identification of patients who will benefit remains an unmet clinical need."

"When imaging mCRPC patients with 68Ga-PSMA-11 PET, the uptake of the radiopharmaceutical in the salivary glands is two to three times higher than that of the liver, which is typically used as a reference organ," said Andrei Gafita, MD. "In this study, we hypothesized that using the salivary glands as a reference organ instead of the liver would enable better patient stratification."

68Ga-PSMA-11 PET scans of 237 men with mCRPC were included in the retrospective study. The ratio of whole-body to salivary gland tumor burden was calculated, creating a quantitative PSG (qPSG) score that can be categorized as high, intermediate or low. Next, 10 nuclear medicine physicians interpreted the scans to assign a visual PSG score (vPSG), also categorized as high, intermediate or low. The scores were then measured against clinical outcomes.

A decline in PSA of more than 50 percent was observed with a high PSG score, and both qPSG and vPSG were independent predictors of this decline. Patients in groups with a high qPSG or vPSG score also had the longest PSA progression-free survival and the longest overall survival. Agreement between qPSG and vPSG scores was moderate, with complete agreement in 68 percent of the patients.

(Excerpt) Read more at medicalxpress.com ...


TOPICS: Health/Medicine
KEYWORDS: prostate; psa
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1 posted on 04/24/2023 6:31:32 PM PDT by ConservativeMind
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2 posted on 04/24/2023 6:33:57 PM PDT by ConservativeMind (Trump: Befuddling Democrats, Republicans, and the Media for the benefit of the US and all mankind.)
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