AI Article Synopsis

  • A shift in prostate biopsy methods favors the transperineal (TP) approach over the transrectal (TR) approach due to a lower risk of severe urinary tract infections, but its effect on detecting clinically significant prostate cancer (csPCa) is uncertain.
  • Researchers analyzed data from patients who had suspicious MRI findings, comparing csPCa detection rates between TP and TR approaches, and did not find significant differences in detection rates (51% TP vs. 52% TR overall).
  • The findings suggest that TP and TR biopsy methods are equally effective for detecting clinically significant prostate cancer, supporting the adoption of the TP approach.

Article Abstract

Background: A remarkable paradigm shift has emerged regarding the preferred prostate biopsy approach, favoring the transperineal (TP) over the transrectal (TR) approach due to the reduced risk of severe urinary tract infections. However, its impact on the detection of clinically significant prostate cancer (csPCa) remains unclear.

Materials And Methods: We relied on a prospectively maintained tertiary care database to identify patients who underwent either TP or TR prostate biopsy between 01/2014 and 12/2023. Of those, only patients with suspicious magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) PIRADS lesions (Likert-scale: 3,4,5) received MRI-targeted and systematic biopsies. Detection rates of csPCa (International Society of Urological Pathology [ISUP] ≥ 2) were compared between biopsy approach (TP vs. TR) according to index lesion. Subsequently, uni- and multivariable logistic regression models were applied to investigate the predictive status of the biopsy approach within each subcohort.

Results: Of 2063 patients, 1118 (54%) underwent combined MRI-guided and systematic prostate biopsy and were included in the final cohort. Of those, 127 (11%) and 991 (89%) underwent TP vs. TR. CsPCa rates, regardless of differences in patients' demographics and distribution of index PIRDAS lesions, did not differ statistically significantly and were 51 vs. 52%, respectively ( = 0.8). CsPCa detection rates for PIRDAS-3, PIRADS-4 and PIRADS-5 did not differ and were 24 vs. 23%, 48 vs. 51% and 72 vs. 76% for PIRADS-3, PIRADS-4 and PIRADS-5 subgroups for TP vs. TR, respectively (all ≥ 0.9) Conclusions: The current results support the available data indicating that TP biopsy approach is comparable to transrectal biopsy approach regarding csPCa detection rates.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11171881PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/diagnostics14111184DOI Listing

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