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Diagnostic Yield of Incremental Biopsy Cores and Second Lesion Sampling for In-Gantry MRI-Guided Prostate Biopsy. | LitMetric

In-gantry MRI-guided biopsy (MRGB) of the prostate has been shown to be more accurate than other targeted prostate biopsy methods. However, the optimal number of cores to obtain during in-gantry MRGB remains undetermined. The purpose of this study was to assess the diagnostic yield of obtaining an incremental number of cores from the primary lesion and of second lesion sampling during in-gantry MRGB of the prostate. This retrospective study included 128 men with 163 prostate lesions who underwent in-gantry MRGB between 2016 and 2019. The men had a total of 163 lesions sampled with two or more cores, 121 lesions sampled with three or more cores, and 52 lesions sampled with four or more cores. A total of 40 men underwent sampling of a second lesion. Upgrade on a given core was defined as a greater International Society of Urological Pathology (ISUP) grade group (GG) relative to the previously obtained cores. Clinically significant prostate cancer (csPCa) was defined as ISUP GG 2 or greater. The frequency of any upgrade was 12.9% (21/163) on core 2 versus 10.7% (13/121) on core 3 ( = .29 relative to core 2) and 1.9% (1/52) on core 4 ( = .03 relative to core 3). The frequency of upgrade to csPCa was 7.4% (12/163) on core 2 versus 4.1% (5/121) on core 3 ( = .13 relative to core 2) and 0% (0/52) on core 4 ( = .07 relative to core 3). The frequency of upgrade on core 2 was higher for anterior lesions ( < .001) and lesions with a higher PI-RADS score ( = .007); the frequency of upgrade on core 3 was higher for apical lesions ( = .01) and lesions with a higher PI-RADS score ( = .01). Sampling of a second lesion resulted in an upgrade in a single patient (2.5%; 1/40); both lesions were PI-RADS category 4 and showed csPCa. When performing in-gantry MRGB of the prostate, obtaining three cores from the primary lesion is warranted to optimize csPCa diagnosis. Obtaining a fourth core from the primary lesion or sampling a second lesion has very low yield in upgrading cancer diagnoses. To reduce patient discomfort and procedure times, operators may refrain from obtaining more than three cores or second lesion sampling.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.2214/AJR.20.24918DOI Listing

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