Radiology Case Reports (Jun 2024)

Prostate cancer brain metastases: Monitoring response to treatment with PSMA PET/CT

  • Anas Al-Zubaidi, MD,
  • Samuel Bezold, DO,
  • Peeyush Bhargava, MD,
  • Javier Villanueva-Meyer, MD

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 19, no. 6
pp. 2367 – 2370

Abstract

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Prostate cancer brain metastases are rare but increasingly recognized with prostate-specific membrane antigen (PSMA) PET/CT. Distinguishing tumor response from postradiation changes are challenging on MRI. PSMA PET/CT may clarify equivocal brain lesions after radiotherapy.A 71-year-old man with metastatic prostate cancer developed 2 new brain lesions on PSMA PET/CT. Lesions were high PSMA-avid and MRI follow up showed enhancing masses with edema, consistent with metastases. He underwent whole-brain radiation. Follow-up PSMA PET/CT after radiotherapy demonstrated significantly decreased lesion size and activity, with activity lower than blood pool, indicating a treatment response. MRI also showed near-resolution of the lesions.This case highlights the potential utility of PSMA PET/CT for detecting prostate cancer brain metastases and monitoring treatment response. PSMA PET/CT provides valuable complementary information to MRI for managing irradiated prostate cancer brain metastases.

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