Objective: To define the learning curve of the in-office, freehand MRI-ultrasound cognitive fusion transperineal prostate biopsy (CTPB) by assessing cancer detection, biopsy core quantity and quality, procedure times, and complications over the initial experience.
Methods: We reviewed 110 consecutive CTPB performed March 2021-September 2022 by a urologist inexperienced with the PrecisionPoint platform. The study period was divided into quarters to assess for temporal variation in outcomes. Univariable and multivariable analysis modeled the learning curve.
Results: Across quarters, there were no differences in the detection of clinically significant prostate cancer (Q1:50%, Q2:52%, Q3:50%, Q4:48%, P > .9) or Gleason grade group upgrading by targeted vs systematic biopsy (P = .6). Median procedure times improved with experience (Q1:17 minutes, Q2:14 minutes, Q3:12 minutes, Q4:13 minutes, P = .018). On multivariable analysis, procedure times decreased by 1minute per 20 cases (P < .001). On linear regression, CTPB procedure times approximated transrectal biopsy times after 90 cases (P < .001). The histopathologic core quality did not differ, as evidenced by consistent core length (P = .13) and presence of minimal fibromuscular tissue (P > .9). The most common complications, hematuria and hematospermia, were similar across quarters (P = .7, P = .3, respectively). There was a single episode of urinary retention and no reported infections.
Conclusion: There is no evidence of a learning curve for CTPB as shown by consistent clinically significant prostate cancer detection, high-quality biopsy cores, and low complications. However, CTPB procedural times begin to approximate cognitive targeted transrectal biopsy times after 90 cases.
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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11363349 | PMC |
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.urology.2023.08.005 | DOI Listing |
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