News Release

FDHT PET additional possibility for tumor localization in prostate cancer patients

Peer-Reviewed Publication

Society of Nuclear Medicine and Molecular Imaging

Prostate cancer is second only to lung cancer as the leading cause of cancer deaths among American men. In hopes of changing this statistic, researchers are exploring a variety of PET imaging techniques to provide quicker and more accurate diagnoses. “As with any cancer, identifying metastases as early as possible is vital to structuring an appropriate treatment regimen and to the long-term survival of the patient,” declared Dr. Steven Larson, who is part of a team that used FDHT PET to investigate the presence of functioning androgen receptors in patients with metastatic prostate cancer.

The study included seven castrate patients whose prostate cancer and the presence of lesions had been proven by prostate specific antigen (PSA) test, bone scan, or CT scan. The patients were evaluated using PET scans with the androgen receptor binding agent [18F] fluoro-dihydro-testosterone (FDHT) and the glycolysis imaging agent [18F] 2-Fluro-D-glucose (FDG), as well as the conventional imaging methods (CIM) noted above. The results of all of the techniques (CIM, FDHT PET and FDG PET) were then compared to each other.

Conventional methods detected 59 lesions among the seven patients, indicating areas where the cancer may have spread. FDG PET detected 58 of these abnormalities, while FDHT PET detected 46. FDHT was rapidly absorbed in the majority of metastatic lesions, indicating the presence of functioning androgen receptors in patients with advanced prostate cancer and demonstrating the potential of FDHT to trace the evolving role of androgen receptors in progressive metastatic prostate cancer. Of note is the fact that, in two of the patients who returned for new scans after they had begun testosterone therapy, FDHT uptake was markedly reduced.

The study, which was presented at the Society of Nuclear Medicine’s 50th Annual Meeting, was conducted by Larson and colleagues in the Departments of Radiology and Medicine at the Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center in New York, the Department of Pharmacology and Therapeutics at the Sloan Kettering Institution in New York, and the Department of Radiology at the Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis, Missouri.

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