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When to perform positron emission tomography/computed tomography or radionuclide bone scan in patients with recently diagnosed prostate cancer

Skeletal metastases are very common in prostate cancer and represent the main metastatic site in about 80% of prostate cancer patients, with a significant impact in patients’ prognosis. Early detection of bone metastases is critical in the management of patients with recently diagnosed high-risk pro...

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Autores principales: Caldarella, Carmelo, Treglia, Giorgio, Giordano, Alessandro, Giovanella, Luca
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Dove Medical Press 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3704306/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23861598
http://dx.doi.org/10.2147/CMAR.S34685
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author Caldarella, Carmelo
Treglia, Giorgio
Giordano, Alessandro
Giovanella, Luca
author_facet Caldarella, Carmelo
Treglia, Giorgio
Giordano, Alessandro
Giovanella, Luca
author_sort Caldarella, Carmelo
collection PubMed
description Skeletal metastases are very common in prostate cancer and represent the main metastatic site in about 80% of prostate cancer patients, with a significant impact in patients’ prognosis. Early detection of bone metastases is critical in the management of patients with recently diagnosed high-risk prostate cancer: radical treatment is recommended in case of localized disease; systemic therapy should be preferred in patients with distant secondary disease. Bone scintigraphy using radiolabeled bisphosphonates is of great importance in the management of these patients; however, its main drawback is its low overall accuracy, due to the nonspecific uptake in sites of increased bone turnover. Positron-emitting radiopharmaceuticals, such as fluorine-18-fluorodeoxyglucose, choline-derived drugs (fluorine-18-fluorocholine and carbon-11-choline) and sodium fluorine-18-fluoride, are increasingly used in clinical practice to detect metastatic spread, and particularly bone involvement, in patients with prostate cancer, to reinforce or substitute information provided by bone scan. Each radiopharmaceutical has a specific mechanism of uptake; therefore, diagnostic performances may differ from one radiopharmaceutical to another on the same lesions, as demonstrated in the literature, with variable sensitivity, specificity, and overall accuracy values in the same patients. Whether bone scintigraphy can be substituted by these new methods is a matter of debate. However, greater radiobiological burden, higher costs, and the necessity of an in-site cyclotron limit the use of these positron emission tomography methods as first-line investigations in patients with prostate cancer: bone scintigraphy remains the mainstay for the detection of bone metastases in current clinical practice.
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spelling pubmed-37043062013-07-16 When to perform positron emission tomography/computed tomography or radionuclide bone scan in patients with recently diagnosed prostate cancer Caldarella, Carmelo Treglia, Giorgio Giordano, Alessandro Giovanella, Luca Cancer Manag Res Review Skeletal metastases are very common in prostate cancer and represent the main metastatic site in about 80% of prostate cancer patients, with a significant impact in patients’ prognosis. Early detection of bone metastases is critical in the management of patients with recently diagnosed high-risk prostate cancer: radical treatment is recommended in case of localized disease; systemic therapy should be preferred in patients with distant secondary disease. Bone scintigraphy using radiolabeled bisphosphonates is of great importance in the management of these patients; however, its main drawback is its low overall accuracy, due to the nonspecific uptake in sites of increased bone turnover. Positron-emitting radiopharmaceuticals, such as fluorine-18-fluorodeoxyglucose, choline-derived drugs (fluorine-18-fluorocholine and carbon-11-choline) and sodium fluorine-18-fluoride, are increasingly used in clinical practice to detect metastatic spread, and particularly bone involvement, in patients with prostate cancer, to reinforce or substitute information provided by bone scan. Each radiopharmaceutical has a specific mechanism of uptake; therefore, diagnostic performances may differ from one radiopharmaceutical to another on the same lesions, as demonstrated in the literature, with variable sensitivity, specificity, and overall accuracy values in the same patients. Whether bone scintigraphy can be substituted by these new methods is a matter of debate. However, greater radiobiological burden, higher costs, and the necessity of an in-site cyclotron limit the use of these positron emission tomography methods as first-line investigations in patients with prostate cancer: bone scintigraphy remains the mainstay for the detection of bone metastases in current clinical practice. Dove Medical Press 2013-06-25 /pmc/articles/PMC3704306/ /pubmed/23861598 http://dx.doi.org/10.2147/CMAR.S34685 Text en © 2013 Caldarella et al, publisher and licensee Dove Medical Press Ltd This is an Open Access article which permits unrestricted noncommercial use, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Review
Caldarella, Carmelo
Treglia, Giorgio
Giordano, Alessandro
Giovanella, Luca
When to perform positron emission tomography/computed tomography or radionuclide bone scan in patients with recently diagnosed prostate cancer
title When to perform positron emission tomography/computed tomography or radionuclide bone scan in patients with recently diagnosed prostate cancer
title_full When to perform positron emission tomography/computed tomography or radionuclide bone scan in patients with recently diagnosed prostate cancer
title_fullStr When to perform positron emission tomography/computed tomography or radionuclide bone scan in patients with recently diagnosed prostate cancer
title_full_unstemmed When to perform positron emission tomography/computed tomography or radionuclide bone scan in patients with recently diagnosed prostate cancer
title_short When to perform positron emission tomography/computed tomography or radionuclide bone scan in patients with recently diagnosed prostate cancer
title_sort when to perform positron emission tomography/computed tomography or radionuclide bone scan in patients with recently diagnosed prostate cancer
topic Review
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3704306/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23861598
http://dx.doi.org/10.2147/CMAR.S34685
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