Abstract

18F-FECH-PET/CT has been proved to be an imaging agent for prostate carcinoma. However, its role in detecting the bone metastases is still blurred owing to the lack of related studies. The purpose of our study was to assess the efficacy of PET with 18F-ethylcholine in assessing the bone status and to compare the results with that of conventional bone scan findings. For this purpose, we selected 37 patients (mean age ), who had been referred for restaging purposes due to biochemical recurrences and underwent both 18F-FECH-PET/CT and bone scan in a short interval. Generally 18 patients out 37 patients referred with biochemical relapse were confirmed to have bone involvement. From 18 confirmed bone involvement cases, 18F-FECH-PET/CT identified correctly the bone involvement in 15 cases with overall sensitivity of 83.3%. On the other hand, bone scan identified 17 out of 18 confirmed cases with overall sensitivity of 94.4%. The lesion-related results show that the sensitivity of each investigation differs with the anatomical regions, and by comparing both results, 18F-FECH-PET/CT was mostly superior to bone scan; however, without a statistical significance ( ). In conclusion, no significant gain in sensitivity was achieved using bone scan compared with 18F-FECH-PET/CT.

1. Introduction

Carcinoma of the prostate is the most common malignancy in men with increased incidence rates owing to the population ageing and the improvement of diagnostic procedures.

The early detection of the bone metastases is of value in making decision regarding the treatment plan, which may vary extremely according to the bone status.

The likelihood of the bone metastases at the first diagnosis varies with the histological score and serum level of prostate-specific antigen, and it is possible to some extent to estimate the degree of tumor spread in the light of the PSA value. Bone involvement is much less frequently involved with low PSA level, so that the bone staging is not recommended with PSA less than 10 ng/mL, except if there are known bone disorders which may later cause false positive findings [13]. However, in patients with PSA relapse after primary therapy it is not easy to be guessed based on PSA values whether the bone involvement or another involvement is behind a PSA rising.

In established skeletal involvement, there is a need of effective imaging method to monitor the status progress. Bone scan is the widely used screening technique for assessing the bone status in the most malignancies, and it shows mostly high sensitivity in detecting the bone involvement. However, it faces a serious disadvantage represented by the low specificity. PET/CT with 18F-fluorodeoxyglucose (FDG) is known to have general limitation in prostate cancer. PET with radiolabeled choline such as 18F-FECH-PET was found to be an effective method in diagnosis of primary and recurrent PCA tumors as well [4, 5]. Two possible mechanisms have been proposed to explain the increased choline uptake in prostate cancer cells. The first is increased cell proliferation in tumors, because choline is a precursor for the biosynthesis of phosphatidylcholine and other phospholipids, the major components of the cell membrane. The second explanation is the overproduction of choline kinase in cancer cells, which was experimentally confirmed in human-derived prostate cancer [68].

Although, 18F-FECH-PET is being increasingly used primarily in patients with prostate cancer and for followup, its efficacy in detecting the bone involvement still needs further investigations in comparison with the established method (bone scan). To our knowledge there are little studies discussing this topic.

We aim in this study mainly to assess the value of 18F-FECH-PET/CT in detecting the bone metastases and to compare the results with that of bone scan.

2. Materials and Methods

2.1. Patients and Art of Therapy

37 patients (mean age ) had been referred in our department for re-staging purposes due to biochemical recurrence, PSA median 2.6 ng/dL (range 0.3–21). Gleason’s score ranges among 3 and 9: GS.7 ( ), GS.8 ( ), GS.9 ( ), GS. 3 ( ), and GS 5 ( ). Gleason’s score was unavailable in eight patients.

The patients underwent a wide variety of initial therapies including radical prostatectomy ( ), radiotherapy ( ), and pure hormonotherapy in patients with locally advanced disease ( ). A number of patients underwent combined therapy due to previous slight PSA increase such as radical prostatectomy followed by salvage radiotherapy ( ), radical prostatectomy followed by salvage antihormonal therapy ( ), or radical prostatectomy followed by HIFU ( ). Nine patients were under ongoing systemic therapy (chemotherapy or antihormonal therapy).

The study was approved by the ethics committee of the Heidelberg University, and a written consent was obtained from all patients.

2.2. Imaging Techniques

Bone scintigraphy was performed using a modern double-head Gamma-camera (Ecam, Siemens Medical Solution) equipped with low-energy, high-resolution collimators. Whole-body images were obtained 2-3 h after intravenous injection of 700 MBq (19 mCi) of 99mTcm-MDP at the scan speed of 15 cm/min in the anterior and posterior projection; additional imaging were acquired, when required.

All PET studies were carried out using a Biograph 6 PET/CT (Siemens/CTI). Imaging was started as dynamic imaging immediately parallel to administration of a standard of 250 MBq of 18F-ethylcholine for 10 min before proceeding to whole body imaging. For attenuation correction of the PET scan, a low-dose CT (130 keV, 30 mAs; Care Dose) without contrast medium was done. Static emission scans, corrected for dead time, scatter, and decay were acquired from the vertex to the proximal legs requiring eight bed positions, 4 minutes each. The images were iteratively reconstructed with the OSEM algorithm using four iterations with eight subsets and Gauss filtering to an in-plane spatial resolution of 5 mm at full-width half-maximum.

Both tests were done in a short interval. The delay between both modalities ranged between 2 and 45 days (average 14 days).

The images were evaluated visually by two skilled nuclear medicine physicians in presence of a skilled radiologist after viewing the images in different planes. The image assessment was achieved in combination with the clinical information and close correlation with other available imaging studies.

2.3. Correlation Methods
2.3.1. Patient Based Results

The findings concerning the bone status were assessed as positive in presence of typical findings validated with followup and/or by correlation with other modality and as negative in absence of the pathological bone uptake (there was no need to prove the negativity), or false positive/negative (if proved the contrary). Sensitivity, specificity, NPV, and PPV are the statistical indicators utilized in assessing the universal outcome.

2.3.2. Lesion-Based Results

In the patients with confirmed bone metastases ( ), the skeleton was divided into five regions (skull, ribs, pelvis, vertebra, and extremities) to simplify the comparison between the matching regions in both examinations. The metastases had been drawn as black points on a separate skeleton outline (Figure 1). Each imaging was evaluated separately, so that the interpretation would not be influenced.

The ANONA test was used to compare the extent of metastatic spread in both examinations in the different regions.

2.4. Choline Uptake Correlated Quantitatively with Both MDP Uptake and Hounsfield’s Units

SUVs were acquired by manually drawing a volume of interest over the pathologic bone lesions that had been identified on visual analysis of static emission images. By using attenuation-corrected PET data, SUVs were calculated as the ratio of regional radioactivity concentration (becquerel/milliliter) divided by the injected amount of radioactivity (Becquerel) normalized to body weight in gram.

CT reading was based on characteristic patterns of morphological change; all detectable lesions on CT were categorized by a radiologist as sclerotic, lytic, or mixed metastases. The quantitative radiodensity of sclerotic lesions was measured by means of the Hounsfield unit (HU).

For quantitative assessment of MDP uptake, we considered an uptake score based on the visual assessment and graduated from 0 till 4 (0 no uptake, 1 decent uptake, 2 moderate uptake, 3 high uptake, 4 extremely severe uptake).

So the intensity of choline uptake was once compared with the radio-density represented by HU and once with MDP uptake (evaluated visually).

Lesions detected in CT and evaluated as high suspected were encompassed in this comparison, regardless whether they showed a positive choline uptake or not.

Some limitations should be kept in mind such as the absence of pathological verification of the bone metastases. Thus, the patients were confirmed as having bone metastases just depending on clinical followups in correlation with other diagnostic tools, for example MRI. The average clinical followup duration to confirm the final diagnosis was 1 year. Moreover, the histopathological confirmation is a common problem shared with such clinical studies.

3. Results

The characteristics of the patients are summarized in Table 1.

3.1. Overall Results

Generally, 18 patients out 37 patients referred with biochemical relapse were confirmed to have bone involvement.

Since the pathological confirmation was not available, the followup and correlation with other modalities were adopted in our verification. (Followup was available in 11 patients; in the remaining seven patients, the verification was based on a typical findings in PET, assessed by two nuclear medicine physicians matching with morphological images such as CT or MRI.) In patients with positive bone findings, the PSA median was 4 ng/dL (range 1–21). By contrast, the patients with negative bone findings had a PSA median value of 1. 5 ng/dL (range 0.3–19). Statistically there was a significant difference between both groups ( ) (Figure 2).

In patients with negative bone findings the PSA relapse was attributed to lymph node metastases ( ), local recurrence ( ), and lung metastases ( ). The underlying cause is still unknown in 11 patients.

From 18 confirmed bone involvement cases, 18F-FECH-PET/CT identified correctly the bone involvement in 15 cases with a sensitivity of 83.3%. No false positive was identified; consequently its specificity was 100%, NPP 86.3%, and PPV 100%.

On the other hand, bone scan showed the presence of the metastases in 17 out of 18 confirmed cases with sensitivity of 94.4%. The single false negative finding was due to a bone marrow metastasis.

From 19 negative findings, the bone scan showed two false positive cases due to Paget disease and trauma. Hence with a specificity of 89.4%, PPV of 89.4% and NPV of 94.4%.

3.2. The Area-Based Results

As mentioned earlier, the skeleton had been divided into multiple regions to simplify the matching of findings.

Totally, the patients with positive findings have 122 lesions. 18F-FECH-PET was capable to identify 101 lesions with a sensitivity 82.7% versus 109 identified using BS (bone scan) with sensitivity of 89.4%. The sensitivity of both modalities differs extremely with the anatomical region (Table 2).

Indeed this superiority of bone scan was demonstrated in ribs (71% in 18F-FECH-PET versus 94% in BS) and cranium. In remaining regions, 18F-FECH-PET was superior in identifying more metastases, in vertebrae (92% versus 85%) and pelvis (91% versus 89%). In the extremities 18F-FECH-PET shows also superiority over bone scan (90% versus 50%) in spite of limited field of view (FOV) Figure 3.

Statistically using ANOVA test there was no significant difference between both modalities ( ) in the number of detected metastases in all anatomical regions.

3.2.1. Examples of Superiority of 18F-FECH-PET/CT Compared with BS in Specificity in Traumatic and Degenerative Alterations

Degenerative Changes: 18F-FECH-PET/CT versus BS (Figure 4)
Whereas the bone scan demonstrates an intensive uptake in this degenerative change, the 18F-FECH-PET/CT shows a negative choline uptake.

Trauma: 18F-FECH-PET/CT  versus BS (Figures 5 and 6)
These images show a discrepancy between MDP uptake and choline uptake in a compression fracture and rib fractures.

A total of 94 out of 122 with the following distribution: (3 in cervical spine, 10 in lumbar spine, 35 in pelvis, 7 in ribs, 4 in sternum, 15 in thoracic spine, 12 in the extremities and 7 in other regions) were selected to make a further quantitative comparison between 18F-FECH-PET and both CT and bone scan using the above mentioned quantitative parameters. 28 lesions were excluded from this analysis, for example, in ribs due to neighborhood to liver (false high SUV through partial volume effect) or due to technical limitations. As previously mentioned, the quantitative assessment in bone scan was based on visual score escalating from 0 till 4.

Based on the radiological portrayal in CT, lesions were divided into osteoblastic lesions ( ), osteolytic ( ), and mixed ( ).

16 lesions of positive choline uptake: (11 in the spine—7 thoracic and 4 lumbar—2 in the pelvis and 3 in the extremities) were lacking morphological alterations. They were characterized with high choline uptake (SUV 5, , 5) and mostly with decent or absent MDP uptake. They were attributed to bone marrow involvement (Figure 7) 13 of sclerotic lesions (6 in pelvis, 3 in thoracic spine and 4 in ribs) (HU mean ) were of negative choline uptake but mostly of intensive MDP uptake (qMDP score ≥3) (qMDP quantitative MDP evaluated visually).

The decline or absence of choline uptake in sclerotic metastasis was noted in particular in patients receiving systemic therapy (Figures 8 and 11).

In contrast, the osteolytic metastases (4 in the pelvis and 1 in the humerus) were characterized with high choline uptake ( , nadir 5.5) and wide extent of MDP uptake (4 showed negative uptake, 4 showed intensive uptake and 2 showed moderate uptake).

A significant negative correlation was demonstrated between tracer uptake SUV(max) and the density of sclerotic lesions assessed by HU ( , ) (Figure 9).

On the other hand, numerical score of MDP was correlated negatively with SUV(max) value (   −0.01) and positively with HU ( 0.34). However, they were statistically not significant.

In few mixed metastases it was demonstrated that the choline uptake was solely concentrated in the osteolytic part evading the sclerotic part (Figure 10(c)). In pure sclerotic metastases it was shown that uptake concentrates at the rim of metastases, where there is a transitional region with a moderate sclerosis (Figures 10(a) and 10(b)).

Examples of the Effects of Ongoing Systemic Therapy on PET Findings
See Figures 11 and 12.

4. Discussion

It is known that the skeleton is a favorable place for metastasis in prostate cancer. It is the second most common site of metastatic disease after lymph nodes and considered as the main cause of morbidity and mortality in prostate cancer patients and mostly related to poor prognosis. The early detection of bone involvement is very crucial for appropriate management. Although bone scan is ranked first in assessing bone status in many malignancies including PCA, it still lacks specificity.

The comparison between PET modality and bone scan in detecting bone involvement was a concern of many studies, mostly involving 18F-FDG PET/CT [911]. Cheng et al. [12] showed, in their review of six studies, that 18F-FDG PET/CT has both higher sensitivity and specificity than bone scintigraphy.

In patients with PCA, Tiwari et al. [13] proved that 18F-FDG-PET/CT can play a complimentary role to the conventional skeletal scintigraphy, particularly in detection of bone marrow disease.

Whether or not 18F-FECH-PET/CT is capable to assess the bone status in an adequate way or requires supplementary test is still blurred. According to our knowledge, there is lack of studies concerning the comparison of 18F-FECH-PET/CT with standard BS. Beheshti et al. [14] showed that 18F-choline- PET/CT had lower sensitivity than 18F fluoride PET-CT for detection of bone metastases (18F-fluoride is bone seeking PET radiopharmaceutical).

Bone scan showed superiority over 18F-FECH-PET/CT in patient-based results (sensitivity 81.2% versus 93.7%). However, the high sensitivity of bone scan encounters a high likelihood of false positive findings. By contrast, 18F-FECH-PET/CT appears to be less affected by such unspecific lesions. The benefit of associated diagnostic CT (occasionally with contrast media) should be kept in mind in minimizing the false positive cases. Yet, CT is not the sole factor affecting the increase of the specificity of 18F-FECH, McCarthy et al. [15] suggested that 18F-FECH-PET can separate benign conditions such as trauma and arthropathy from malignancy and may be useful as an assistant to bone scan in equivocal cases.

Basically, there is need to perform bone scan in case of negative 18F-FECH-PET/CT finding if there is clinical suspicion, under suggestion that 18F-FECH-PET is of less sensitivity. However, bone scan can be reserved and an unnecessary radiation exposure can be avoided, if proven otherwise. So whether or not bone scan can be abandoned as a complementary test to 18F-FECH-PET/CT is of a high clinical value.

We found that 18F-FECH-PET/CT showed less sensitivity compared with BS; however, two out of three patients demonstrating false negative PET findings were under systemic therapy, suggesting a potential impact of systemic therapy in minimizing the sensitivity.

4.1. Sensitivity Variance in Different Regions

In our patient group, ribs and pelvis were the most commonly involved areas in about 60% of patients.

Looking at the findings of both modalities in the various anatomical regions, we observed better lesion detection efficiency of BS in the ribs with sensitivity of 98% versus 73%. On the other hand, the 18F-FECH-PET/CT was more effective in pelvis (93% versus 87%) and in extremities in spite of the presence of few metastases outside the field of view. In vertebra the 18F-FECH-PET/CT was also more accurate than BS.

Because of poor spatial resolution of BS, an uptake in the spine could be incorrectly attributed to degenerative changes that may explain the low sensitivity of BS in spine compared with 18F-FECH-PET/CT. Moreover, a single lesion may be overlooked in planar BS. Indeed, SPECT (single photon emission computed tomography) can minimize the shortcoming of planar BS in the assessment of the spine; however it is not routinely applied.

In this regard, it should be mentioned that spinal metastases have typical locations, mostly in the posterior part of vertebrae due to the many short intraosseous arteries [16, 17], and they can be easily recognized and differentiated from degenerative changes in 18F-FECH-PET/CT in the light of morphological view provided by CT component.

In other anatomical regions 18F-FECH-PET/CT showed advantage over BS; this can be attributed to the superior spatial resolution. Of course the associated CT contributed to a certain degree in increasing the sensitivity of 18F-FECH-PET/CT through detecting the bone metastases of a negative choline uptake. These metastases were mostly of sclerotic type. In the same topic, we found that FECH uptake decreases with increasing sclerosis (negative correlation between HU and SUV(max) , ). Moreover antihormonal therapy (AHT) was of selected impact in sclerotic metastases. This issue emphasizes the importance of CT in compensating the deficiency of 18F-FECH-PET in patients under AHT.

Further benefit of CT is the validating the PET finding through excluding other benign changes that may share the same findings with the metastases.

4.2. Bone Marrow (BM) Involvement in Both Modalities

Since the bone marrow is associated with minimal morphological changes and unusual to cause bone reaction, it remains undetectable or can be easily overlooked using morphological modalities or using bone seeking nuclides. Kato and coworkers reported a case of bone marrow metastasis finally detected by marrow biopsy, without any abnormality on bone scintigraphy or computed tomography [18].

Generally, the BM aspiration and biopsy remain the procedures of choice to detect BM involvement. 18F-FDG PET is supposed to have special value in detecting BM involvement; Aydin et al. [19] described a case of bone marrow metastasis detected by 18F-FDG PET and missed by bone scintigraphy in widespread melanoma. 18F-FECH-PET/CT in prostate cancer patients shares this property, whereas there is no role of CT or BS. Beheshti et al. [20] described a positive choline bone marrow metastasis in the thoracic spine without any CT abnormality.

In our results, PET positive findings without morphological changes in spine, pelvis and proximal extremities were attributed to bone marrow involvement. BS was not of further benefit in identifying them; they were either of negative or decent MDP uptakes. That raises the following question: What is the real clinical benefit of BS over 18F-FECH-PET/CT, if the deficiency of choline-PET is mainly in osteoblastic metastases, which are simply to be visualized using associated CT? In other words, if CT can adequately compensate the deficiency of 18F-FECH-PET, still bone scan offers further diagnostic information? Indeed, in order to validate its further performance as complementary test, bone scan is required to show a superiority over 18F-FECH-PET/CT both components PET and CT. Just looking at lesion-based results, there is no real justification for additional bone scan, since the gain in detecting more lesions is not valuable in patients with multiple metastases, who should anyway undergo systemic therapy. However, in patient-based results we notice that associated CT failed in identifying three false negative cases in 18F-FECH-PET/CT, which were ultimately detected using BS. More advantage of bone scan is emphasized in its availability and ease to repeat for followup. Moreover, in multiple bone metastases if pain radiotherapy is indicated, bone scan is necessary because MDP distributes in a similar way as bone seeking therapy-tracer.

4.3. Impact of Systemic Therapy

In 18F-FECH-PET/CT, choline uptake is supposed to be linked with presence of tumor cells which can transport and metabolize it. In contrast, BS displays the bone metastases indirectly through demonstrating the structural alterations. For this reason, any alteration concerning the tumor focus (whether progress or regress) is supposed to be first detected in choline-PET. This fact and the possibility to perform a quantitative assessing grant the 18F-FECH-PET a unique value in therapy monitoring.

Subsequent to therapy onset, a drop in SUV is an appropriate indicator for response. By contrast, in bone scan the therapy response may lead to transient increasing MDP uptake due to an amplified osteoblastic response in the so-called “flare phenomenon.” This can be mistaken with progress and typically lasts about 6 months after therapy [2123]. For this reason, the early response can never be assessed using BS. CT is also of negligible role in therapy monitoring, since the morphological alterations occur in delay.

To understand the weakness of BS in therapy monitoring, we ought to return to the pathology of the bone metastases in prostate cancer. In this type of bone metastasis, intramembranous ossification takes place in regions of fibrous stroma and after therapy administration; the ossification process stays for a certain time running in the manufactured stroma despite damaging the causing tumor cells and evoked mediators. In other words, the ongoing mineralization processes, thus MDP uptake, would not be inhibited after therapy onset even if the therapy is successful.

Compared with BS, as mentioned earlier, choline uptake in 18F-FECH-PET/CT is supposed to reflect directly the tumor focus, and the reduction in SUV early after initiation of therapy can distinguish responders from nonresponders. However, does uptake decline always indicate response? In some cases, it was demonstrated that shortly after treatment onset, the 18F-FECH-PET/CT turned to be negative just in osteoblastic metastases, while osteolytic metastases were preserved. This effect of AHT in the sclerotic metastases was already described by Beheshti et al. [20]. It may also explain the lower total sensitivity of 18F-FECH-PET/CT compared with BS in the area-based results (6 patients were under ongoing AHT in our study).

In another case of our study under AHT, the followup shows a dramatic uptake decline in bone metastases. However, there is uptake increase in the accompanying lymph node metastases. Therefore this uptake decline in bone metastases is likely to reflect a temporal diminishing of uptake rather to be an indicator for real response. A similar case was described by Beheshti et al. [20].

The loss of choline uptake was also observed in osteoblastic metastases in patients undergoing no therapy. As mentioned earlier, choline uptake declines with increasing sclerosis, probably due to the drop in blood supply thus in nuclide availability. Beheshti et al. [20] found that a HU level above 825 is associated with an absence of metabolic activity.

Due to the lack of long-term followup, it is still unknown whether or not these metastases are still alive if reaching the stage of negative choline uptake. Obviously, even if the metastasis center reaches this stage, the rim where there is a moderate sclerosis remains active.

Ultimately, the potential role of 18F-FECH-PET/CT in therapy monitoring seems to be limited in case of bone involvement, because choline uptake is likely to be affected by local factors such as the level of sclerosis.

5. Conclusion

No significant gain in sensitivity was achieved using bone scan compared with 18F-FECH-PET/CT. In lesion-based results, the diagnostic potential of both modalities varies in the different anatomical regions and shows 18F-FECH-PET/CT mostly of superior value. That was attributed to the higher spatial resolution and the additional benefit of accompanied CT except for its value in detecting the bone marrow involvement.

Abbreviations

:F-fluorethylcholine-PET
PCA:Prostate cancer
BS:Bone scan
MRI:Magnetic resonance imaging
PPV:Positive predictive value
NPV:Negative predictive value
PR:Radical prostatectomy
RTx:Radiation therapy
CTx:Chemotherapy
NIL:Nothing
ANT:Hormone/androgen deprivation therapy
LN-M:Lymph node metastasis
OSS:Bone metastasis
PM:pulmonary metastasis
Neg:Negative finding.

Acknowledgment

The author would like to acknowledge with thanks the valuable suggestions of Dr. Eugen Braun, Knappschaft Hospital, Sulzbach, Germany, in completing this work.