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Prostate-specific Membrane Antigen and Fluciclovine Transporter Genes are Associated with Variable Clinical Features and Molecular Subtypes of Primary Prostate Cancer

  • Carissa E. Chu,
  • Mohammed Alshalalfa,
  • Martin Sjöström,
  • Shuang G. Zhao,
  • Yang Liu,
  • Jonathan Chou,
  • Annika Herlemann,
  • Brandon Mahal,
  • Amar Kishan,
  • Daniel E. Spratt,
  • Matthew Cooperberg,
  • Eric Small,
  • Anthony Wong,
  • Sima Porten,
  • Thomas A. Hope,
  • Ashley E. Ross,
  • Elai Davicioni,
  • Paul Nguyen,
  • R. Jeffrey Karnes,
  • Peter R. Carroll,
  • Edward Schaeffer,
  • Felix Y. Feng

18F-Fluciclovine-based positron emission tomography (PET) imaging is recommended in the USA for biochemical recurrence (BCR) after prostate cancer treatment. However, prostate-specific membrane antigen (PSMA)-based PET imaging is more common worldwide, supported by international guidelines, and is now approved by the Food and Drug Administration in the USA for initial staging of primary prostate cancer. Little is known about the molecular profiles of lesions detected by PSMA-targeted PET/computed tomography (CT) versus 18F-fluciclovine PET/CT. We examined the expression of PSMA (FOLH1) and the fluciclovine transporter genes LAT1–4 and ASCT1/2 in a combined cohort of more than 18 000 radical prostatectomy specimens and their associations with clinical outcomes. Expression of PSMA and all but one fluciclovine transporter gene was higher in prostate cancer than in benign tissue. PSMA expression was associated with Gleason score (GS) ≥8 and lymph node involvement (LNI), and had a positive linear correlation with Decipher risk score. By contrast, expression of the fluciclovine transporters LAT2, LAT3, and ASCT2 was negatively associated with GS ≥ 8, LNI, and high Decipher score. The top decile of PSMA expression was associated with poorest metastasis-free survival (MFS), while the bottom deciles of LAT3 and ASCT2 expression were associated with poorest MFS.