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. 2024 Sep 9;25(17):9755. doi: 10.3390/ijms25179755

Table 2.

PET-imaging studies assessed the impact on PSMA expression of prostate carcinoma lesions under androgen deprivation therapy.

Authors Study Type Nb of Patients Treatment Duration, Range Results
Afshar Oromieh et al.
[43]
retrospective 10 42–396 d 14/31 lesions + in 8 pts,
1/3rd of lesions still + in 6 pts with a complete PSA response
Höberuck et al. [44] retrospective 21 61–289 d ↓in all pts, in pts with post-therapy PSA <1 ng/mL, 49 lesions no longer visible
Gupta et al. [45] retrospective 43 3–12 m After a median treatment duration of 6 months, 23.3% of LN and 17.6% of M+ were no longer visible, ↓ in the PSMA signal ↑ in M0 vs. M1 disease
Emmett et al. [46] prospective 15 28 d (imaging on d9, d18 and d28 post-treatment In 8 hormone-sensitive patients, uptake progressively ↓ (LHRH +/− bicalutamide)
In the 7 castration-resistant pts, uptake progressively ↑ (enzalutamide or arbiraterone))
Ettala et al. [47] prospective 9 6.2 w (imaging at 1.5 w, 2.9 w and 6.2 weeks post-treatment) In 1 pt, 3 new bone M+ were identified; in 7 pts, lesion count ↑; in 2 pts, no change was found
Malaspina et al. [48] prospective 25 3–4 w 104/404 bone M+,33/314 LN and 6/57 ppc showed an ↑ in tracer uptake, in 22/23 pts with bone M+ a flare phenomenon was found

Legend. All patients underwent a baseline PSMA-targeted PET examination, treatment duration = timing, after which follow-up PET scans were performed. Study references are indicated between brackets. Pts = patients; ppc = primary prostate carcinoma; LN = lymph node; M+ = metastasis; LHRH = luteinizing hormone-releasing hormone; ↑ = high(er) or increase; ↓ = low(er) or decrease; nb = number of.