Purpose: To determine if nonenhancing tissue on gadolinium-enhanced magnetic resonance (MR) images obtained 3 weeks after cryoablation of the prostate helps reliably and accurately predict nonviable cryoablated tissue at 6-month biopsy.
Materials And Methods: Fifty-four consecutive patients with prostate cancer who underwent cryoablation were followed up prospectively. Fifty-one underwent gadolinium-enhanced MR imaging at 3 weeks (three had gadolinium allergy); 49, biopsy at 6 months (three refused and two had other primary malignancies); and all, prostate-specific antigen (PSA) tests at 6 weeks, 3 months, and every 3 months thereafter. MR images were evaluated and scored according to the degree of signal void and were correlated with the 6-month biopsy reports and, to a lesser degree, PSA levels. The biopsy reports were examined for the presence or absence of cancerous tissue, viable tissue, and nonviable tissue. A one-way analysis of variance was used for statistical and regression analyses.
Results: The correlation of MR imaging scores with PSA levels and MR imaging scores with biopsy findings resulted in P values of.337 and.780, respectively. A slight statistically significant trend existed for the relation of biopsy results with PSA levels, with a P value of.041, which was expected.
Conclusion: Findings of postoperative gadolinium-enhanced MR imaging are not predictive of 6-month biopsy results or follow-up PSA levels.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1148/radiol.2323030841 | DOI Listing |
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