Cancers (Oct 2023)

EAU Biochemical Recurrence Risk Classification and PSA Kinetics Have No Value for Patient Selection in PSMA-Radioguided Surgery (PSMA-RGS) for Oligorecurrent Prostate Cancer

  • Fabian Falkenbach,
  • Francesca Ambrosini,
  • Pierre Tennstedt,
  • Matthias Eiber,
  • Matthias M. Heck,
  • Felix Preisser,
  • Markus Graefen,
  • Lars Budäus,
  • Daniel Koehler,
  • Sophie Knipper,
  • Tobias Maurer

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers15205008
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 20
p. 5008

Abstract

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Objective: To assess the influence of biochemical recurrence (BCR) risk groups and PSA kinetics on the outcomes of radioguided surgery against prostate-specific membrane antigen (PSMA-RGS). Currently, neither BCR risk group nor PSA doubling time (PSA-DT), or PSA velocity (PSA-V) are actively assigned or relevant for counseling prior to PSMA-RGS. Methods: We retrospectively analyzed PSMA-RGS cases for oligorecurrent prostate cancer between 2014 and 2023. BCR risk groups, PSA-DT, and PSA-V were analyzed as predictors for complete biochemical response (cBR, PSA p = 1.0). BCR classification was no predictor for BCRFS (HR:1.61, CI: 0.70–3.71, p = 0.3) or subsequent TFS (HR:1.07, CI: 0.46–2.47, p = 0.9). A total of 47/76 (62%) patients with PSA-DT ≤ 6 mo and 50/84 (60%) with PSA-DT > 6 mo achieved cBR (p = 0.4). PSA-DT was not associated with cBR (OR: 0.99, CI: 0.95–1.03, p = 0.5), BCRFS (HR: 1.00, CI: 0.97–1.03, p = 0.9), or TFS (HR: 1.02, CI: 0.99–1.04, p = 0.2). Consistent negative findings were recorded for PSA-V. Conclusions: The BCR risk groups and PSA kinetics do not predict the oncological success of PSMA-RGS performed at low absolute PSA values. Indolent low-risk BCR is rarely treated by PSMA-RGS.

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