RT Journal Article SR Electronic T1 An 89Zr-Labeled PSMA Tracer for PET/CT Imaging of Prostate Cancer Patients JF Journal of Nuclear Medicine JO J Nucl Med FD Society of Nuclear Medicine SP 573 OP 583 DO 10.2967/jnumed.121.262290 VO 63 IS 4 A1 Felix Dietlein A1 Carsten Kobe A1 Sergio Muñoz Vázquez A1 Thomas Fischer A1 Heike Endepols A1 Melanie Hohberg A1 Manuel Reifegerst A1 Bernd Neumaier A1 Klaus Schomäcker A1 Alexander E. Drzezga A1 Markus Dietlein YR 2022 UL http://jnm.snmjournals.org/content/63/4/573.abstract AB The short half-life of existing prostate-specific membrane antigen (PSMA) tracers limits their time for internalization into tumor cells after injection, which is an essential prerequisite for robust detection of tumor lesions with low PSMA expression on PET/CT scans. Because of its longer half-life, the 89Zr-labeled ligand 89Zr-PSMA-DFO allows acquisition of PET scans up to 6 d after injection, thereby overcoming the above limitation. We investigated whether 89Zr-PSMA-DFO allowed more sensitive detection of weak PSMA-positive prostate cancer lesions. Methods: We selected 14 prostate cancer patients with biochemical recurrence who exhibited no PSMA-positive lesions on a PET scan acquired with existing PSMA tracers (68Ga-PSMA-11, 18F-JK-PSMA-7). Within 5 wk after the negative scan result, we obtained a second PSMA PET scan using 89Zr-PSMA-DFO (117 ± 16 MBq, PET acquisition within 6 d of injection). Results: 89Zr-PSMA-DFO detected 15 PSMA-positive lesions in 8 of 14 patients, who had a PET-negative reading of their initial PET scans with existing tracers. In these 8 patients, the new scans revealed localized recurrence of disease (3/8), metastases in lymph nodes (3/8), or lesions at distant sites (2/8). On the basis of these results, patients received lesion-targeted radiotherapies (5/8), androgen deprivation therapies (2/8), or no therapy (1/8). The plausibility of 14 of 15 lesions was supported by histology, clinical follow-up after radiotherapy, or subsequent imaging. Furthermore, comparison of the 15 89Zr-PSMA-DFO–positive lesions with their correlates on the original PET scan revealed that established tracers exhibited mild accumulation in 7 of 15 lesions; however, contrast-to-noise ratios were too low for robust detection of these lesions (contrast-to-noise ratios, 2.4 ± 3.7 for established tracers vs. 10.2 ± 8.5 for 89Zr-PSMA-DFO, P = 0.0014). The SUVmax of the 15 89Zr-PSMA-DFO–positive lesions (11.5 ± 5.8) was significantly higher than the SUVmax on the original PET scans (4.7 ± 2.8, P = 0.0001). Kidneys were the most exposed organ, with doses of 3.3 ± 0.7 mGy/MBq. The effective dose was 0.15 ± 0.04 mSv/MBq. Conclusion: In patients with weak PSMA expression, a longer period of time might be needed for ligand internalization than that offered by existing PSMA tracers to make lesions visible on PET/CT scans. Hence, 89Zr-PSMA-DFO might be of significant benefit to patients in whom the search for weak PSMA-positive lesions is challenging. Radiation exposure should be weighed against the potential benefit of metastasis-directed therapy or salvage radiotherapy, which we initiated in 36% (5/14) of our patients based on their 89Zr-PSMA-DFO PET scans.