Assessment after focal therapy: what is the latest?

Curr Opin Urol

Division of Urology, Duke Cancer Institute, Durham, North Carolina, USA.

Published: May 2022

AI Article Synopsis

  • Purpose of the review is to evaluate the assessment process after focal therapy (FT) in light of recent developments over the last two years.
  • Recent findings highlight the lack of high-quality studies and emphasize the need to stratify oncologic treatment failures into recurrence areas, with ongoing monitoring using PSA testing and imaging techniques like MRI, while also exploring new methods like PSA derivatives.
  • The consensus indicates a necessity for better long-term data to standardize patient management post-therapy, advocating for a collaborative approach between patients and clinicians to effectively monitor for recurrence.

Article Abstract

Purpose Of Review: To review assessment after focal therapy (FT) in the context of developments from the past two years.

Recent Findings: With a paucity of high-quality studies, recent findings are primarily reliant on results from institutional-based cohorts and reports of expert consensus. Notably, oncologic treatment failure should be further stratified into recurrence in the in-field or out-of-field ablation zone, and both regions should be surveilled postoperatively. Monitoring primarily consists of periodic evaluations of prostate-specific antigen (PSA) testing and magnetic resonance imaging, with histologic sampling needed to confirm suspicion of recurrence. Recent investigations into PSA derivatives, contrast-enhanced ultrasound, and prostate-specific membrane antigen imaging have shown preliminary promise. Although postablation functional outcomes are generally accepted to be excellent, they are limited by the wide range of patient-reported measures, variability in individual practice, and low questionnaire completion rates.

Summary: There is still a need for high-level, long-term data to inform exact standardized protocols to manage patients after FT. A multifaceted approach is required to surveil patients and identify those at risk of recurrence. Embracing shared responsibility between the patient and clinician to fastidiously monitor the infield and out-of-field ablation zones postoperatively is critical to maximize oncologic outcomes.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/MOU.0000000000000988DOI Listing

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