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Bone histology at autopsy and matched bone scintigraphy findings in patients with hormone refractory prostate cancer: the effect of bisphosphonate therapy on bone scintigraphy results
Authors:Roudier M P  Vesselle H  True L D  Higano C S  Ott S M  King S H  Vessella R L
Affiliation:(1) Departments of Urology, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington, USA;(2) Radiology, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington, USA;(3) Pathology, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington, USA;(4) Oncology, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington, USA;(5) Medicine and Endocrynology, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington, USA;(6) Puget Sound VA Medical Center, Seattle, Washington, USA
Abstract:Bisphosphonates (BisP) are non-metabolized compounds with high bone affinity used in bone metastasis diagnosis and treatment. Currently, BisP are used to treat hypercalcemia of malignancy as well as to prevent, minimize, or delay skeletal morbidity. These compounds have a long half-life in bone. Thus long-term BisP treatment might saturate bone and interfere with a single-dose scanning agent used for bone scintigraphy when visualizing bone metastases. In an effort to answer this question, this study evaluated the concordance of histology and Technetium99 methylene diophosphonate (Tc99 MDP) bone scintigraphy in the diagnosis of bone metastases in prostate cancer patients. We assessed the concordance of findings between bone scintigraphy and histology using 188 bone biopsies from 11 autopsied patients who died with metastatic prostate cancer, 5 of whom were treated with pamidronate for 2 to 13 months before death. Overall agreement between histology and bone scintigraphy was 84%, 86% in non-pamidronate-treated patients and 82% in pamidronate-treated patients. Scintigraphic bone metastases without histological metastasis (false negatives = 12.7%) were observed in 24 anatomic locations; half of these were in one patient who had been treated with pamidronate and had no histological bone response to the carcinoma. There were only 4 sites where a positive bone scan was not associated with histologic metastasis (false positives = 2.21%). There was no statistical difference between the treated and non-treated group for concordance, specificity, sensitivity, positive and negative predictive values of bone scintigraphy and prevalence of histological abnormality. Long-term pamidronate treatment of prostate cancer bone metastases does not generally affect the ability to detect bone metastases with Tc99 MDP bone scintigraphy. This revised version was published online in July 2006 with corrections to the Cover Date.
Keywords:autopsy  bisphosphonates  bone metastases  Tc99 MDP bone scintigraphy  histology  pamidronate  prostate cancer
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