| Literature DB >> 32231090 |
Joseph M Norris1,2,3,4, Veeru Kasivisvanathan1,3, Clare Allen5, Rhys Ball6, Alex Freeman6, Maneesh Ghei4, Alex Kirkham5, Hayley C Whitaker1, Daniel Kelly7, Mark Emberton1,3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The introduction of multiparametric magnetic resonance imaging (mpMRI) has improved the diagnosis of suspected prostate cancer, accurately risk-stratifying men before a biopsy. However, pre-biopsy mpMRI represents a significant deviation from the traditional approach of prostate specific antigen testing with subsequent systematic transrectal ultrasound-guided prostate biopsy and we have not yet explored the views of men who experience this new pathway. The purpose of the PACT study (PAtient views and aCceptance of mulTiparametric MRI) is to explore men's perceptions of mpMRI.Entities:
Keywords: diagnostic pathway; multiparametric MRI; patient views; prostate cancer; risk stratification
Year: 2020 PMID: 32231090 PMCID: PMC7359448 DOI: 10.3390/mps3020026
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Methods Protoc ISSN: 2409-9279
Figure 1A diagram of the diagnostic pathway for suspected prostate cancer. The time interval between primary care referral and review in the prostate assessment clinic is less than two weeks. The time interval between mpMRI and MRI-guided biopsy is less than two weeks. 2WW two week wait, DRE digital rectal examination (of the prostate), FHx family history (of prostate cancer), LUTS lower urinary tract symptoms, MDT multi-disciplinary team, mpMRI multiparametric magnetic resonance imaging, MSU mid-stream urine culture, PCa prostate cancer, PSA prostate specific antigen, PSAD PSA density.
Figure 2Predicted patient accruement (solid blue line: the expected rate of accruement, based on four eligible men being recruited per week; dashed green line: slower recruitment rate, based on two eligible men being recruited per week; dashed red line: accelerated recruitment rate, based on six eligible men being recruited per week).
Figure 3A flow diagram representing the different stages of the mixed-methods evaluation of the PACT study. csPCa clinically significant prostate cancer, n participant number, mpMRI multiparametric magnetic resonance imaging, TRUS transrectal ultrasound.
Themes (topic schedule) to be explored during the interview study.
| Background | Pathway Comparison | Biopsy Strategy | Cancer Significance | Education |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| We have begun using MRI scans to help diagnose prostate cancer and would value your thoughts on this. | Previously, men with suspected prostate cancer would normally have prostate samples taken through the back-passage, without an MRI being performed – this approach could miss up to 50% of important cancers. Today, MRI scans are more readily available and can help us to detect around 80–90% of important tumours (if the MRI is performed before samples are taken). | When we take a prostate sample, we can choose to sample only cancers that we “see” on the MRI scan. This targeted approach has the advantage of diagnosing more “significant cancers” and fewer “insignificant” cancers; however, this does risk missing cancers elsewhere in the prostate. Alternatively, we can choose to sample the “whole prostate” (in addition to sampling the ‘target’) but this has a higher risk of detecting non-harmful cancer, bleeding, retention of urine and discomfort. | There is still no consensus definition of what makes prostate cancer ‘significant.’ However, some cancers are “more aggressive” than others and can spread around the body – these generally benefit from treatment. Others are “less aggressive” and do not spread or cause harm – these generally do not benefit from treatment and treating these cancers may cause more harm than the cancers themselves. | There are lots of information sources for patients and we would value your thoughts on these. |
| Can you tell me what experience you have had of MRI scanning? | Any new approach has drawbacks and benefits and the new MRI approach can miss 10–20% of prostate cancers – what do you think of this? How far does this risk worry you? | Can you tell me, what experience you have had, if any, of prostate biopsy? | If you were diagnosed with prostate cancer, which aspect of the cancer would be most important to you? | What format is normally best for you when it comes to information about your health? |