AI Article Synopsis

  • This study evaluated the effectiveness of systematic biopsy (SB), target biopsy (TB), and their combination in detecting prostate cancer in men with high-risk PI-RADS 5 lesions from MRI scans.
  • A total of 112 patients were analyzed, showing that TB alone had a detection rate of 93%, while combining TB with SB slightly increased the detection rates of overall and clinically significant prostate cancer.
  • The results indicated that while SB provides a marginal benefit in finding clinically significant cancer in patients with higher prostate specific antigen density (>0.15 ng/ml), it does not significantly improve overall prostate cancer detection rates.

Article Abstract

Purpose: We evaluated the prostate cancer and clinically significant prostate cancer detection on systematic biopsy (SB), target biopsy (TB) alone and combined SB and TB in men with Prostate Imaging Reporting and Data System™ (PI-RADS™) 5 lesion.

Materials And Methods: From a prospectively maintained prostate biopsy database, we identified consecutive patients with PI-RADS 5 lesion on multiparametric magnetic resonance imaging. The patients underwent multiparametric magnetic resonance imaging followed by transrectal TB of PI-RADS 5 lesion and 12-core SB. The prostate cancer and clinically significant prostate cancer (Grade Group, GG ≥2) detection on SB, TB and SB+TB were determined for all men and accordingly to prostate specific antigen density. Statistic significant was set a p <0.05.

Results: Overall, 112 patients met inclusion criteria. The detection rate of prostate cancer for SB, TB and SB+TB was 89%, 93% and 95%, respectively, and for clinically significant prostate cancer it was 72%, 81% and 85%, respectively. SB added 2% prostate cancer and 4% clinically significant prostate cancer detection to TB. A total of 78 patients had prostate specific antigen density >0.15 ng/ml, and the detection rate of PCa for SB, TB and SB+TB was 92%, 97% and 97%, respectively, and for clinically significant prostate cancer it was 79%, 91% and 95%, respectively. In this population, if SB was omitted, 0 prostate cancer and only 4% (3) of clinically significant prostate cancer would be missed. The clinically significant prostate cancer detection rate improved with increased prostate specific antigen density for SB (p=0.01), TB (p <0.0001) and combined SB+TB (p=0.002).

Conclusions: In patients with PI-RADS 5 on multiparametric magnetic resonance imaging and prostate specific antigen density >0.15 ng/ml, SB marginally increases clinically significant prostate cancer detection, but not overall prostate cancer detection in comparison to TB alone. Systematic biopsy did not affect patients' management and can be omitted on this population.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/JU.0000000000001766DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

prostate cancer
40
clinically prostate
24
prostate
16
cancer detection
16
systematic biopsy
12
prostate specific
12
specific antigen
12
antigen density
12
cancer clinically
12
cancer
10

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!