Case Reports in Oncology (Jun 2024)

Disseminated Carcinomatosis of the Bone Marrow from Castration-Resistant Prostate Cancer Revealed by Choline Positron Emission Tomography-Computed Tomography

  • Kazuhiro Kitajima,
  • Shingo Yamamoto,
  • Akihiro Kanematsu,
  • Masato Tomono,
  • Sayuri Nishimoto,
  • Reona Wada,
  • Miyu Hirayama,
  • Jyunpei Kitamoto,
  • Kiyoshi Takagaki,
  • Norihiro Kuroda,
  • Takako Kihara,
  • Koichiro Yamakado

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1159/000539333
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 17, no. 1
pp. 640 – 645

Abstract

Read online

Introduction: Disseminated carcinomatosis of the bone marrow is caused by cancer metastasis to the bone marrow and is the diagnosis is very difficult by imaging. Case Presentation: We report a 75-year-old male with disseminated carcinomatosis of the bone marrow from castration-resistant prostate cancer revealed by 11C-choline positron emission tomography-computed tomography (PET/CT). Although he already received radiotherapy to the prostate, combined androgen blockade, enzalutamide and apalutamide, and external beam radiotherapy for the pelvic bone metastases, serum prostate-specific antigen (PSA) value rapidly increased from 32 ng/mL to 104 ng/mL in recent 1 month. Bone scintigraphy showed almost no abnormal uptake in the whole body, whereas 11C-choline PET/CT showed diffuse bone marrow 11C-choline uptake. The disseminated carcinomatosis of the bone marrow was diagnosed from the discordant findings between bone scintigraphy and 11C-choline PET/CT examinations and confirmed pathologically by iliac marrow biopsy pathologically. Although docetaxel therapy was started, PSA value continued rising and he died after 4 months of the diagnosis. Conclusion: The discordant findings of choline PET/CT and bone scintigraphy can diagnose disseminated carcinomatosis of the bone marrow from prostate cancer.

Keywords