AI Article Synopsis

  • This study examined the link between diffusion coefficients in certain prostate lesions and significant prostate cancer within the transition zone.
  • A total of 102 patients who had biopsies for high-risk prostate lesions were analyzed, revealing a 49% cancer detection rate and that lower diffusion coefficients were associated with clinically significant cancer.
  • The findings suggest that the minimum apparent diffusion coefficient could serve as an important predictor for identifying clinically significant prostate cancer, aiding decisions on further biopsies for patients displaying these lesions.

Article Abstract

Background: This study investigated the association between apparent diffusion coefficients in Prostate Imaging Reporting and Data System 4/5 lesions and clinically significant prostate cancer in the transition zone.

Methods: We included 102 patients who underwent transperineal cognitive fusion targeted biopsy for Prostate Imaging Reporting and Data System 4/5 lesions in the transition zone between 2016 and 2020. The association between apparent diffusion coefficients and prostate cancers in the transition zone was analyzed.

Results: The detection rate of prostate cancer was 49% (50/102), including clinically significant prostate cancer in 37.3% (38/102) of patients. The minimum apparent diffusion coefficients in patients with clinically significant prostate cancer were 494.5 ± 133.6 µm/s, which was significantly lower than 653.8 ± 172.5 µm/s in patients with benign histology or clinically insignificant prostate cancer. Age, prostate volume, transition zone volume, and mean and minimum apparent diffusion coefficients were associated with clinically significant prostate cancer. Multivariate analysis demonstrated that only the minimum apparent diffusion coefficient value (odds ratio: 0.994; p < 0.001) was an independent predictor of clinically significant prostate cancer. When the cutoff value of the minimum apparent diffusion coefficient was less than 595 µm/s, indicating the presence of prostate cancer in the transition zone, the detection rate increased to 59.2% (29/49) in this cohort.

Conclusion: The minimum apparent diffusion coefficient provided additional value to indicate the presence of clinically significant prostate cancer in the transition zone. It may help consider the need for subsequent biopsies in patients with Prostate Imaging Reporting and Data System 4/5 lesions and an initial negative targeted biopsy.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10119207PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10147-023-02324-yDOI Listing

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