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OtherClinical Investigations (Human)

Semi-automatically quantified tumor volume using Ga-68-PSMA-11-PET as biomarker for survival in patients with advanced prostate cancer

Robert Seifert, Ken Herrmann, Jens Kleesiek, Michael A. Schafers, Vijay Shah, Zhoubing Xu, Guillaume Chabin, Sasa Garbic, Bruce Spottiswoode and Kambiz Rahbar
Journal of Nuclear Medicine April 2020, jnumed.120.242057; DOI: https://doi.org/10.2967/jnumed.120.242057
Robert Seifert
1 Department of Nuclear Medicine, University Hospital Muenster, Germany;
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Ken Herrmann
2 Department of Nuclear Medicine, University Hospital Essen, Germany;
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Jens Kleesiek
3 Division of Radiology, German Cancer Research Center, Germany;
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Michael A. Schafers
1 Department of Nuclear Medicine, University Hospital Muenster, Germany;
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Vijay Shah
4 Siemens Medical Solutions USA
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Zhoubing Xu
4 Siemens Medical Solutions USA
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Guillaume Chabin
4 Siemens Medical Solutions USA
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Sasa Garbic
4 Siemens Medical Solutions USA
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Bruce Spottiswoode
4 Siemens Medical Solutions USA
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Kambiz Rahbar
1 Department of Nuclear Medicine, University Hospital Muenster, Germany;
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Abstract

Prostate specific membrane antigen (PSMA) targeting Positron Emission Tomography (PET) imaging is becoming the reference standard for prostate cancer (PC) staging, especially in advanced disease. Yet, the implications of PSMA-PET derived whole-body tumor volume for overall survival are poorly elucidated to date. This might be due to the fact that (semi-) automated quantification of whole-body tumor volume as PSMA-PET biomarker is an unmet clinical challenge. Therefore, a novel semi-automated software is proposed and evaluated by the present study, which enables the semi-automated quantification of PSMA-PET biomarkers such as whole-body tumor volume. Methods: The proposed quantification is implemented as a research prototype (MI Whole Body Analysis Suite, v1.0, Siemens Medical Solutions USA, Inc., Knoxville, TN). PSMA accumulating foci were automatically segmented by a percental threshold (50% of local SUVmax). Neural networks were trained to segment organs in PET-CT acquisitions (training CTs: 8,632, validation CTs: 53). Thereby, PSMA foci within organs of physiologic PSMA uptake were semi-automatically excluded from the analysis. Pretherapeutic PSMA-PET-CTs of 40 consecutive patients treated with 177Lu-PSMA-617 therapy were evaluated in this analysis. The volumetric whole-body tumor volume (PSMATV50), SUVmax, SUVmean and other whole-body imaging biomarkers were calculated for each patient. Semi-automatically derived results were compared with manual readings in a sub-cohort (by one nuclear medicine physician using syngo.MM Oncology software, Siemens Healthineers, Knoxville, TN). Additionally, an inter-observer evaluation of the semi-automated approach was performed in a sub-cohort (by two nuclear medicine physicians). Results: Manually and semi automatically derived PSMA metrics were highly correlated (PSMATV50: R2=1.000; p<0.001; SUVmax: R2=0.988; p<0.001). The inter-observer agreement of the semi-automated workflow was also high (PSMATV50: R2=1.000; p<0.001; ICC=1.000; SUVmax: R2=0.988; p<0.001; ICC=0.997). PSMATV50 [ml] was a significant predictor of overall survival (HR: 1.004; 95%CI: 1.001-1.006, P = 0.002) and remained so in a multivariate regression including other biomarkers (HR: 1.004; 95%CI: 1.001-1.006 P = 0.004). Conclusion: PSMATV50 is a promising PSMA-PET biomarker that is reproducible and easily quantified by the proposed semi-automated software. Moreover, PSMATV50 is a significant predictor of overall survival in patients with advanced prostate cancer that receive 177Lu-PSMA-617 therapy.

  • Oncology: GU
  • PET/CT
  • Radionuclide Therapy
  • PSMA-PET-CT
  • Prostate cancer
  • image biomarker
  • tumor volume
  • Copyright © 2020 by the Society of Nuclear Medicine and Molecular Imaging, Inc.
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Journal of Nuclear Medicine: 66 (5)
Journal of Nuclear Medicine
Vol. 66, Issue 5
May 1, 2025
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Semi-automatically quantified tumor volume using Ga-68-PSMA-11-PET as biomarker for survival in patients with advanced prostate cancer
Robert Seifert, Ken Herrmann, Jens Kleesiek, Michael A. Schafers, Vijay Shah, Zhoubing Xu, Guillaume Chabin, Sasa Garbic, Bruce Spottiswoode, Kambiz Rahbar
Journal of Nuclear Medicine Apr 2020, jnumed.120.242057; DOI: 10.2967/jnumed.120.242057

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Semi-automatically quantified tumor volume using Ga-68-PSMA-11-PET as biomarker for survival in patients with advanced prostate cancer
Robert Seifert, Ken Herrmann, Jens Kleesiek, Michael A. Schafers, Vijay Shah, Zhoubing Xu, Guillaume Chabin, Sasa Garbic, Bruce Spottiswoode, Kambiz Rahbar
Journal of Nuclear Medicine Apr 2020, jnumed.120.242057; DOI: 10.2967/jnumed.120.242057
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Keywords

  • Oncology: GU
  • PET/CT
  • radionuclide therapy
  • PSMA-PET-CT
  • prostate cancer
  • image biomarker
  • tumor volume
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