| Literature DB >> 25674540 |
Kiri Sandler1, Mausam Patel1, Charles Lynne2, Dipen J Parekh2, Sanoj Punnen2, Merce Jorda3, Javier Casillas4, Alan Pollack1, Radka Stoyanova1.
Abstract
An important key to clinical management of prostate cancer patients is to determine early those who will benefit from primary treatment and are not good candidates for active surveillance (AS). We describe a 67-year-old gentleman with a long history of stable prostate-specific antigen (PSA) levels and a negative biopsy. After slight PSA rise and low volume Gleason score 6 biopsy, the patient was considered for primary treatment or AS. A multiparametric (MP)-MRI exam revealed a suspicious lesion in the anterior apex of the prostate. Biopsies were carried out on a 3D-ultrasound prostate biopsy system with MRI-fusion. The location of the target area was challenging and could have been missed using standard 12-core biopsy template. The pathology determined Gleason 3 + 4 disease in 30% of the core from this region. Consequently, the patient underwent radiotherapy (RT). MP-MRI was also used to follow the changes from pre- to post-RT.Entities:
Keywords: active surveillance; multiparametric-MRI; prostate cancer; radiotherapy; targeted biopsies
Year: 2015 PMID: 25674540 PMCID: PMC4306300 DOI: 10.3389/fonc.2015.00004
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Oncol ISSN: 2234-943X Impact factor: 6.244
Figure 1Multiparametric-MRI findings and directed prostate biopsy of the index lesion. (A) T2-weighted MRI and ADC map, with arrows indicating tumor area; (B) DCE-MRI intensity map with the lightest (yellow) part representing the areas of rapid contrast wash-in and gradual washout; and (C) tumor (yellow) and prostate (brown) contours. Both volumes were transferred to Artemis™ for fusion to the real-time ultrasound prior to prostate biopsy; 3D representation of the tumor with biopsy needle path shown.
Figure 2H&E stain of MP-MRI-ultrasound-directed prostate biopsy. The ink stain indicates that the tumor is located on the tip of the biopsy. The region in the red box is at 20× magnification and shows Gleason score = 3 + 4.
Figure 3Comparison of MP-MRI exam before and after radiotherapy. T2-weighted MRI, ADC map, and contrast-versus-time curves pre- (A) and 3 months post-RT (B) of two prostate regions are shown: malignant lesion pre-treatment (blue) and healthy appearing PZ (red).