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Skeletal standardized uptake values obtained by quantitative SPECT/CT as an osteoblastic biomarker for the discrimination of active bone metastasis in prostate cancer.
Purpose: To investigate the improvement of prognostication of active bone metastatic burden by discriminating bone metastases from degenerative changes in hot foci, using skeletal standardized uptake values (SUVs) by quantitative bone single photon emission tomography/computed tomography (SPECT/CT) in patients with prostate cancer.
Methods: We investigated 170 patients with prostate cancer who underwent skeletal quantitative SPECT/CT using 99m Tc-methylene-diphosphonate (MDP), through conjugate gradient reconstruction with tissue zoning, attenuation, and scatter corrections applied, called as CGZAS reconstruction, in a retrospective cohort study. The maximum, peak, and average SUVs (SUVmax, SUVpeak, and SUVave, respectively) were obtained for visually normal thoracic (T; n = 100) and lumbar (L; n = 140) vertebral bodies as controls, as well as for bone metastases ( n = 126) and degenerative changes ( n = 114) as hot foci. They were also correlated with age, body-weight, height, biochemistry data, and extent of disease (EOD). Discrimination accuracy of the SUVs for bone metastases in hot foci was evaluated by a patient-based and lesion-based receiver-operator characteristic curve (ROC) analysis.
Results: The skeletal SUVmax was 7.58 ± 2.42 for T, 8.12 ± 12.24 for L, 16.73 ± 6.74 for degenerative changes, and 40.90 ± 33.46 for bone metastases. The SUVs of the bone metastasis group were significantly ( p < 0.001) greater than of the other three groups. With disease extent, serum alkaline phosphatase and prostate specific antigen were increased, while SUVs for bone metastases were decreased in EOD grade 4. In ROC analyses for bone metastases by skeletal SUVs demonstrating the diagnostic accuracy of skeletal SUVs for discriminating bone metastasis from degenerative changes in hot foci, area under curves were 0.840, 0.817, and 0.845 in patient-based mode, and 0.932, 0.920, and 0.930 in lesion-based mode.
Conclusions: The skeletal SUVs by 99m Tc-MDP SPECT/CT for active bone metastases were greater than those for degenerative changes in patients with prostate cancer, with a feasible discrimination accuracy in the hot foci. Therefore, skeletal SUVs, especially SUVmax, in quantitative bone SPECT/CT may be helpful indices for the prognostication of bone metastatic burden, improving discrimination of active bone osteoblastic metastases in patients with prostate cancer from frequently coexisting degenerative changes.
Methods: We investigated 170 patients with prostate cancer who underwent skeletal quantitative SPECT/CT using 99m Tc-methylene-diphosphonate (MDP), through conjugate gradient reconstruction with tissue zoning, attenuation, and scatter corrections applied, called as CGZAS reconstruction, in a retrospective cohort study. The maximum, peak, and average SUVs (SUVmax, SUVpeak, and SUVave, respectively) were obtained for visually normal thoracic (T; n = 100) and lumbar (L; n = 140) vertebral bodies as controls, as well as for bone metastases ( n = 126) and degenerative changes ( n = 114) as hot foci. They were also correlated with age, body-weight, height, biochemistry data, and extent of disease (EOD). Discrimination accuracy of the SUVs for bone metastases in hot foci was evaluated by a patient-based and lesion-based receiver-operator characteristic curve (ROC) analysis.
Results: The skeletal SUVmax was 7.58 ± 2.42 for T, 8.12 ± 12.24 for L, 16.73 ± 6.74 for degenerative changes, and 40.90 ± 33.46 for bone metastases. The SUVs of the bone metastasis group were significantly ( p < 0.001) greater than of the other three groups. With disease extent, serum alkaline phosphatase and prostate specific antigen were increased, while SUVs for bone metastases were decreased in EOD grade 4. In ROC analyses for bone metastases by skeletal SUVs demonstrating the diagnostic accuracy of skeletal SUVs for discriminating bone metastasis from degenerative changes in hot foci, area under curves were 0.840, 0.817, and 0.845 in patient-based mode, and 0.932, 0.920, and 0.930 in lesion-based mode.
Conclusions: The skeletal SUVs by 99m Tc-MDP SPECT/CT for active bone metastases were greater than those for degenerative changes in patients with prostate cancer, with a feasible discrimination accuracy in the hot foci. Therefore, skeletal SUVs, especially SUVmax, in quantitative bone SPECT/CT may be helpful indices for the prognostication of bone metastatic burden, improving discrimination of active bone osteoblastic metastases in patients with prostate cancer from frequently coexisting degenerative changes.
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