CC BY-NC-ND 4.0 · World J Nucl Med 2012; 11(02): 75-78
DOI: 10.4103/1450-1147.103422
Case Report

False-negative bone scan and choline PET/CT study in a case of prostate cancer: The pitfall of the small cell prostate carcinoma variant

Ammad Al-Tamimi
Department of Nuclear Medicine and PET, Singapore General Hospital, Singapore
,
Andrew Tan
Department of Nuclear Medicine and PET, Singapore General Hospital, Singapore
,
Sidney Kwong
Department of Nuclear Medicine and PET, Singapore General Hospital, Singapore
,
Christopher Sam
1   Department of Urology, Singapore General Hospital, Singapore
,
Angela Chong
2   Department of Pathology, Singapore General Hospital, Singapore
,
Cher Tan
3   Department of Diagnostic Radiology, Tan Tock Seng General Hospital, Singapore
› Author Affiliations

We present a rare variant of prostate carcinoma. The patient is a 45-year-old male with elevated prostate-specific antigen levels at screening. Magnetic resonance imaging revealed hyperenhancing lesions throughout the axial skeleton. The fluorine-18 fluorocholine (FCH) positron emission tomography/computed tomography (PET/CT) scan showed no abnormal bone findings. Subsequently, a technetium-99 methydiphosphonate (Tc99m-MDP) bone scan was performed, with additional correlative single-photon emission computed tomography (SPECT)/CT imaging of the pelvis and the results were essentially normal. A percutaneous core biopsy of one of the bone lesions in L5 was performed and histology confirmed small cell (neuroendocrine) variant of prostate cancer. Our case illustrates a possible pitfall in molecular imaging of prostate carcinomas, whereby both bone scintigraphy and FCH PET/CT scans showed no definite bone lesions to correlate with marrow signal abnormalities seen on MR imaging. This highlights the need for caution in the diagnostic evaluation of prostate cancers with known small cell variants.



Publication History

Article published online:
21 May 2022

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