| Literature DB >> 26847758 |
Pieter J L De Visschere1, Alberto Briganti2, Jurgen J Fütterer3, Pirus Ghadjar4, Hendrik Isbarn5,6, Christophe Massard7, Piet Ost8, Prasanna Sooriakumaran9,10, Cristian I Surcel11, Massimo Valerio12, Roderick C N van den Bergh13, Guillaume Ploussard14,15, Gianluca Giannarini16, Geert M Villeirs17.
Abstract
UNLABELLED: Most prostate cancers (PC) are currently found on the basis of an elevated PSA, although this biomarker has only moderate accuracy. Histological confirmation is traditionally obtained by random transrectal ultrasound guided biopsy, but this approach may underestimate PC. It is generally accepted that a clinically significant PC requires treatment, but in case of an non-significant PC, deferment of treatment and inclusion in an active surveillance program is a valid option. The implementation of multiparametric magnetic resonance imaging (mpMRI) into a screening program may reduce the risk of overdetection of non-significant PC and improve the early detection of clinically significant PC. A mpMRI consists of T2-weighted images supplemented with diffusion-weighted imaging, dynamic contrast enhanced imaging, and/or magnetic resonance spectroscopic imaging and is preferably performed and reported according to the uniform quality standards of the Prostate Imaging Reporting and Data System (PIRADS). International guidelines currently recommend mpMRI in patients with persistently rising PSA and previous negative biopsies, but mpMRI may also be used before first biopsy to improve the biopsy yield by targeting suspicious lesions or to assist in the selection of low-risk patients in whom consideration could be given for surveillance. TEACHING POINTS: • MpMRI may be used to detect or exclude significant prostate cancer. • MpMRI can guide targeted rebiopsy in patients with previous negative biopsies. • In patients with negative mpMRI consideration could be given for surveillance. • MpMRI may add valuable information for the optimal treatment selection.Entities:
Keywords: Diffusion magnetic resonance imaging; Magnetic resonance imaging; Magnetic resonance spectroscopy; Prostate; Prostatic neoplasms
Year: 2016 PMID: 26847758 PMCID: PMC4805618 DOI: 10.1007/s13244-016-0466-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Insights Imaging ISSN: 1869-4101
The PIRADS overall assessment categories
| PIRADS 1 | Clinically significant prostate cancer is highly unlikely to be present |
|---|---|
| PIRADS 2 | Clinically significant prostate cancer is unlikely to be present |
| PIRADS 3 | Clinically significant prostate cancer is equivocal |
| PIRADS 4 | Clinically significant prostate cancer is likely to be present |
| PIRADS 5 | Clinically significant prostate cancer is highly likely to be present |
Fig. 167-year-old man with persistently elevating PSA up to 6 μg/l. On this mpMRI a very suspicious lesion is detected in the apex of the prostate at the left side (white star). Morphologically it is demonstrated as an area of low SI with irregular margins on T2-WI (a), low ADC value (b) with high SI on the high-b-value image (c) of the DWI, strong contrast enhancement (d) with early and high peak enhancement with wash-out on the DCE curve (e). On MRSI the citrate peaks are reduced and the choline peaks elevated. The overall assessment score of this exam was PI-RADS 5. A targeted TRUS-biopsy with knowledge of the mpMRI findings (i.e., a MR-guided biopsy with cognitive fusion) confirmed a Gleason 4 + 5 PC in the apex at the left side
Fig. 265-year-old man with PSA of 3.2 μg/l. On T2-WI (a) the PZ shows normal high SI. On DWI, the ADC values in the PZ are high (b) and the SI on the b-1000 images is low (c). On DCE the PZ shows no suspicious contrast enhancement (d) and the DCE curves show a linear pattern (e). On MRSI (f) the spectra show normal high citrate peaks and low choline concentrations. The overall conclusion of this mpMRI exam was PI-RADS1. On the basis of this mpMRI, a clinically significant PC could be excluded with high certainty. A biopsy may reasonably be deferred, or if a biopsy shows low grade PC in a few cores, this patient is a good candidate for active surveillance