Publications by authors named "Reijke T"

Background And Objective: Urothelial bladder cancer (UCB) care requires frequent follow-up cystoscopy and surgery. Confocal laser endomicroscopy (CLE), a probe-based optical technique for real-time microscopic evaluation, has shown promising accuracy for grading of UCB. We investigated the diagnostic accuracy of CLE-based assessment of the surgical radicality of the bladder resection bed (RB).

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Objective: To describe the shape and volume of ablations created by transperineal laser ablation (TPLA) using multiple fiber configurations. Furthermore, to measure the change in the ablation zone and prostate volume over time, and to assess inter-patient ablation volume variability.

Methods: Data from a prospective, single-center, interventional pilot study including 20 patients is used.

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Background: Focal laser ablation (FLA) serves as a targeted therapy for prostate cancer (PCa). Clinical studies have demonstrated significant variations in ablation volumes with consistent fiber configurations. Consequently, a prediction model is needed for the safe application of FLA in treating PCa.

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Purpose: Urothelial bladder cancer (UCB) care requires frequent follow-up cystoscopy and surgery. Confocal laser endomicroscopy (CLE) is a probe-based optical technique that can provide real-time microscopic evaluation with the potential for outpatient grading of UCB. This study aims to investigate the diagnostic accuracy and interobserver variability for the grading of UCB with CLE during flexible cystoscopy (fCLE).

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Article Synopsis
  • Scientists looked at different advanced optical methods to find and diagnose bladder cancer, focusing on how good these methods are at detecting the disease.
  • They found many techniques, like narrow-band imaging and photodynamic diagnosis, and checked a lot of articles to see how effective they were compared to traditional methods.
  • In the end, the techniques generally worked better than older methods, especially narrow-band imaging, which was the best at detecting bladder cancer, while some techniques showed good accuracy for diagnosing it.
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  • This study looks at problems with positioning needles during prostate cancer treatment, focusing on two main issues: obstacles from the pubic arch and mistakes in needle placement.
  • The researchers found 50 articles and discovered that the amount of interference from the pubic arch can vary based on a person's prostate size and position, while some treatments caused more needle misplacements than others.
  • Current guidelines on how to position needles are unclear and differ from one hospital to another, but using special steerable needles could help make the procedures safer and more accurate.
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Purpose: The objective of this study was to identify and assess patient and disease characteristics associated with an increased risk of disease progression in men with prostate cancer on active surveillance.

Methods: We studied patients with low-risk (ISUP GG1) or favorable intermediate-risk (ISUP GG2) PCa. All patients had at least one repeat biopsy.

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Temporary elevation of tumor temperature, also known as hyperthermia, is a safe and well-tolerated treatment modality. The efficacy of hyperthermia can be improved by efficient thermosensitizers, and various candidate drugs, including inhibitors of the heat stress response, have been explored in vitro and in animal models, but clinically relevant thermosensitizers are lacking. Here, we employ unbiased in silico approaches to uncover new mechanisms and compounds that could be leveraged to increase the thermosensitivity of cancer cells.

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Background: Standard surgical treatment for lower urinary tract symptoms (LUTS) due to benign prostatic obstruction (BPO) requires anaesthesia and hospitalization. Transperineal laser ablation (TPLA) is a novel minimally invasive treatment for BPO, which has been performed using local anaesthetics and conscious sedation.

Objectives: The aim of this study is to assess safety, feasibility and functional outcomes of TPLA for the treatment of LUTS in men fit also for standard surgery.

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The clinical presentation of renal cell cancer (RCC) is shifting towards incidental and early detection, creating new challenges in RCC diagnosis. Overtreatment might be reduced with the development of new diagnostic biomarkers to distinguish benign from malignant small renal masses (SRMs). Differently from tissue biopsies, liquid biopsies are obtained from a patient's blood or urine and, therefore, are minimally invasive and suitable for longitudinal monitoring.

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Article Synopsis
  • The study investigates whether biochemical recurrence (BCR) can predict overall survival (OS) in localized prostate cancer by analyzing patient data from 11 clinical trials focused on various treatment methods.* -
  • Results showed that while treatment methods like short-term androgen deprivation therapy (ADT) improved cancer outcomes, there was no significant treatment impact on OS when adjusting for BCR after 48 months.* -
  • The correlation between BCR-free survival and OS was moderate, with Kendall's tau values demonstrating a range between 0.59 and 0.69, indicating a potential relationship but underscoring the complexity of predicting overall survival based on BCR.*
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Background: Transperineal focal laser ablation (TPLA) treatment for prostate cancer (PCa) is an experimental focal ablative therapy modality with low morbidity. However, a dosimetry model for TPLA is lacking.

Objective: To determine (1) the three-dimensional (3D) histologically defined ablation zone of single- and multifiber TPLA treatment for PCa correlated with magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and contrast-enhanced ultrasound (CEUS) and (2) a reliable imaging modality of ablation zone volumetry.

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Context: Whole-gland ablation is a feasible and effective minimally invasive treatment for localized prostate cancer (PCa). Previous systematic reviews supported evidence for favorable functional outcomes, but oncological outcomes were inconclusive owing to limited follow-up.

Objective: To evaluate the real-world data on the mid- to long-term oncological and functional outcomes of whole-gland cryoablation and high-intensity focused ultrasound (HIFU) in patients with clinically localized PCa, and to provide expert recommendations and commentary on these findings.

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  • FDG-PET/CT is becoming a common tool for preoperative staging in muscle-invasive bladder cancer, but its effectiveness in high-risk non-muscle invasive bladder cancer (NMIBC) is still unclear.
  • This retrospective study analyzed data from 92 patients scheduled for radical cystectomy, comparing results from FDG-PET/CT and contrast-enhanced CT.
  • Findings showed that FDG-PET/CT detected metastases in 15% of cases and changed treatment plans for 10% of patients, indicating its potential value in specific high-risk NMIBC scenarios.
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Importance: Focal ablative irreversible electroporation (IRE) is a therapy that treats only the area of the tumor with the aim of achieving oncological control while reducing treatment-related functional detriment.

Objective: To evaluate the effect of focal vs extended IRE on early oncological control for patients with localized low- and intermediate-risk prostate cancer.

Design, Setting, And Participants: In this randomized clinical trial conducted at 5 centers in Europe, men with localized low- to intermediate-risk prostate cancer were randomized to receive either focal or extended IRE ablation.

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Purpose: Our goal was to evaluate the effect of focal vs extended irreversible electroporation on side effects, patient-reported quality of life, and early oncologic control for localized low-intermediate risk prostate cancer patients.

Materials And Methods: Men with localized low-intermediate risk prostate cancer were randomized to receive focal or extended irreversible electroporation ablation. Quality of life was measured by International Index of Erectile Function, Expanded Prostate Cancer Index Composite questionnaire, and International Prostate Symptom Score.

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  • The study explores how the timing of androgen-deprivation therapy (ADT) relative to radiotherapy (RT) affects outcomes for prostate cancer, particularly comparing prostate-only RT (PORT) and whole-pelvis RT (WPRT).
  • Researchers analyzed data from 12 randomized trials involving 7,409 patients and utilized advanced statistical methods to assess the impact of ADT sequencing on metastasis-free survival and overall survival.
  • Findings indicated that for patients receiving PORT, concurrent/adjuvant ADT resulted in better metastasis-free survival and lower rates of prostate cancer-specific mortality, whereas WPRT showed no significant differences in outcomes based on ADT timing.
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  • - The study investigates the impact of local failure after radiotherapy in patients with intermediate- and high-risk prostate cancer, utilizing data from over 12,500 patients in various trials from 1985 to 2015.
  • - Local failure is linked to worse overall survival and prostate cancer-specific survival in high-risk patients, while intermediate-risk patients showed a strong connection between local failure and distant metastasis-free survival, but not overall survival.
  • - The research highlights that patients who experience local failure face a higher risk of progressing to prostate cancer-specific death, emphasizing the importance of monitoring local failure as part of patient prognosis.
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Background: Muscle-invasive bladder cancer (MIBC) has a poor prognosis. Chemoradiotherapy (CRT) in selected patients has comparable results to radical cystectomy. Results of neoadjuvant immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICIs) before radical cystectomy are promising.

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Purpose: The introduction of magnetic resonance imaging (MRI)-targeted biopsy (TBx) besides systematic prostate biopsies has resulted in a discussion on what the optimal prostate biopsy strategy is. The ideal template has high sensitivity for clinically significant prostate cancer (csPCa), while reducing the detection rate of clinically insignificant prostate cancer (iPCa). This study evaluates different biopsy strategies in patients with a unilateral prostate MRI lesion.

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To assess the safety and technical feasibility of needle-based forward-looking confocal laser endomicroscopy in prostate tissue. For this feasibility study, 2 patients with a suspicion of prostate cancer underwent transperineal needle-based confocal laser endomicroscopy during ultrasound-guided transperineal template mapping biopsies. After intravenous administration of fluorescein, needle-based confocal laser endomicroscopy imaging was performed with a forward-looking probe (outer diameter 0.

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Article Synopsis
  • - Metformin, primarily used for type II diabetes, may have potential anticancer effects and was reviewed for its impact on urothelial bladder cancer (BC) incidence and outcomes in both non-muscle-invasive (NMIBC) and muscle-invasive bladder cancer (MIBC).
  • - A systematic review analyzed 13 studies involving over 3 million patients, revealing that metformin did not significantly affect BC incidence but showed a reduced risk of recurrence and mortality in MIBC patients.
  • - The effectiveness of metformin for BC remains uncertain; while it may improve outcomes in some cases, more prospective clinical trials are needed to definitively assess its benefits.
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Background: Accurate monitoring following focal treatment of prostate cancer (PCa) is paramount for timely salvage treatment or retreatment.

Objective: To evaluate the diagnostic accuracy of multiparametric magnetic resonance imaging (mpMRI) to detect residual PCa in the short-term follow-up of focal treatment with irreversible electroporation (IRE) using transperineal or transrectal template ± targeted biopsies.

Design, Setting, And Participants: A retrospective international multicenter study of men with biopsy-proven PCa, treated with focal IRE, and followed by mpMRI (index-test) and template biopsies (reference-test) between February 2013 and January 2021, was conducted.

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