Equivocal bone lesions on PSMA PET/CT: Systematic review and meta-analysis on their prevalence and malignancy rate Review


Authors: Woo, S.; Freedman, D.; Becker, A. S.; Leithner, D.; Mayerhoefer, M. E.; Friedman, K. P.; Arita, Y.; Han, S.; Burger, I. A.; Taneja, S. S.; Wise, D. R.; Zelefsky, M. J.; Vargas, H. A.
Review Title: Equivocal bone lesions on PSMA PET/CT: Systematic review and meta-analysis on their prevalence and malignancy rate
Abstract: Purpose: Prostate-specific membrane antigen (PSMA) PET/CT has an established reliable diagnostic performance for detecting metastases in prostate cancer. However, there are increasing instances of scans demonstrating equivocal bone lesions, with non-specific uptake and without a definite benign or malignant CT correlate. To date, the prevalence, malignancy rate, and relationship with radioligand type ([18F] PSMA-1007 vs. others ([68Ga]Ga-PSMA-11 and [18F] DCFPyL) for these equivocal lesions have not been extensively established. Methods: A systematic review and meta-analysis was conducted on equivocal bone lesions. Pubmed and EMBASE were searched up to December 11, 2023. Quality of the studies was evaluated using QUADAS-2. The following proportions were pooled using random-effects model: (1) prevalence of equivocal bone lesions (i.e., number of patients with one or more equivocal bone lesions/number of patients with PSMA PET/CT) and (2) their malignancy rates (i.e., number of metastases/number of equivocal bone lesions). Subgroup analyses based on radioligand type, clinical setting, and definition of equivocal bone lesion were performed. Results: Twenty-five studies (4484 patients) were included. Pooled prevalence of equivocal bone lesions was 20% (95%CI, 12–31%). [18F]PSMA-1007 was associated with a greater prevalence of equivocal lesions compared with other radioligands: 36% (95%CI 26–48%) vs. 8% (95%CI, 4–14%), respectively, p < 0.01. Pooled malignancy rate of equivocal bone lesions was 14% (95%CI, 7–25%). [18F]PSMA-1007 was associated with a lower malignancy rate compared to other radioligands: 8% (95%CI, 3–19%) vs. 29% (95%CI, 17–44%), respectively, p = 0.01. There were no signficant difference in prevalence or malignancy rate between subgroups stratified to clinical setting or definition of equivocal bone lesions (p = 0.32–0.60). Conclusions: Equivocal bone lesions are often encountered on PSMA PET/CT but exihibit a low malignancy rate. Compared to other radioligands, [18F]PSMA-1007 requires special attention as it is associated with a higher frequency and lower rate of metastasis. © The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Italian Association of Nuclear Medicine and Molecular Imaging 2024.
Keywords: review; nuclear magnetic resonance imaging; positron emission tomography; technetium 99m; quality control; prevalence; data base; prostate cancer; bone lesion; prostate specific membrane antigen; systematic review; data analysis; meta analysis; radioligand; data extraction; maximum standardized uptake value; data synthesis; human; positron emission tomography-computed tomography; preferred reporting items for systematic reviews and meta-analyses; quality assessment of diagnostic accuracy studies; gallium gozetotide ga 68; equivocal bone lesion; unspecific bone uptake; [<sup>18</sup>f]psma-1007
Journal Title: Clinical and Translational Imaging
Volume: 12
Issue: 5
ISSN: 2281-5872
Publisher: Springer  
Date Published: 2024-10-01
Start Page: 485
End Page: 500
Language: English
DOI: 10.1007/s40336-024-00631-6
PROVIDER: scopus
DOI/URL:
Notes: Review -- Source: Scopus
Altmetric
Citation Impact
BMJ Impact Analytics
MSK Authors
  1. Yuki Arita
    17 Arita