Literature DB >> 34428091

Systematic versus Targeted Magnetic Resonance Imaging/Ultrasound Fusion Prostate Biopsy among Men with Visible Lesions.

Hiten D Patel1, Elizabeth L Koehne1, Steven M Shea2, Andrew M Fang3, Alex Gorbonos1, Marcus L Quek1, Robert C Flanigan1, Ari Goldberg2, Soroush Rais-Bahrami3,4,5, Gopal N Gupta1,2,6.   

Abstract

PURPOSE: Multiparametric magnetic resonance imaging (mpMRI)-ultrasound (US) fusion-guided biopsy may improve prostate cancer (PCa) detection and reduce grade misclassification. We compared PCa detection rates on systematic, magnetic resonance imaging-targeted, and combined biopsy with evaluation of important subgroups.
MATERIALS AND METHODS: Men with clinical suspicion of harboring PCa from 2 institutions with visible Prostate Imaging-Reporting and Data System (PI-RADSTMv2) lesions receiving mpMRI-US fusion-guided prostate biopsy were included (2015-2020). Detection of PCa was categorized by grade group (GG). Clinically-significant PCa (csPCa) was defined as ≥GG2. Patients were stratified by biopsy setting and PI-RADS.
RESULTS: Of 1,236 patients (647 biopsy-naïve) included, 626 (50.6%) harbored PCa and 412 (33.3%) had csPCa on combined biopsy. Detection of csPCa was 27.9% vs 23.3% (+4.6%) and GG1 PCa was 11.3% vs 17.8% (-6.5%) for targeted vs systematic cores. Benefit in csPCa detection was higher in the prior negative than biopsy-naïve setting (+7.8% [p <0.0001] vs +1.7% [p=0.3]) while reduction in GG1 PCa detection remained similar (-5.6% [p=0.0002] vs -7.3% [p=0.0001]). Targeted biopsy showed increased csPCa detection for PI-RADS 5, decrease in GG1 for PI-RADS 3, and both for PI-RADS 4 relative to systematic biopsy. Combined biopsy detected more csPCa (+10.0%) and slightly fewer GG1 PCa (-0.5%) compared to systematic alone. Upgrading to ≥GG2 by targeted biopsy occurred in 9.8% with no cancer and 23.6% with GG1 on systematic biopsy.
CONCLUSIONS: Combined biopsy doubled the benefit of targeted biopsy alone in detection of csPCa without increasing GG1 PCa diagnoses relative to systematic biopsy. Utility of targeted biopsy was higher in the prior negative biopsy cohort, but advantages of combined biopsy were maintained regardless of biopsy history.

Entities:  

Keywords:  biopsy; diagnostic techniques, urological; magnetic resonance imaging; prostatic neoplasms

Mesh:

Year:  2021        PMID: 34428091     DOI: 10.1097/JU.0000000000002120

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Urol        ISSN: 0022-5347            Impact factor:   7.450


  2 in total

1.  Evaluation of systematic prostate biopsies when performing transperineal MRI/TRUS fusion biopsy with needle tracking-what is the additional value?

Authors:  Jakob Schlegel; Stefan Hinz; Karsten Günzel; Ahmed Magheli; Jonas Busch; Eduard Baco; Hannes Cash; Stefan Heinrich; Daniela Edler; Martin Schostak; Hendrik Borgmann
Journal:  Int Urol Nephrol       Date:  2022-07-25       Impact factor: 2.266

2.  Construction and Comparison of Different Models in Detecting Prostate Cancer and Clinically Significant Prostate Cancer.

Authors:  Yongheng Zhou; Wenqiang Qi; Jianfeng Cui; Minglei Zhong; Guangda Lv; Sifeng Qu; Shouzhen Chen; Rongyang Li; Benkang Shi; Yaofeng Zhu
Journal:  Front Oncol       Date:  2022-07-12       Impact factor: 5.738

  2 in total

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