1. Can we rely on magnetic resonance imaging for prostate cancer detection and surgical planning? Comprehensive analysis of a large cohort of patients undergoing transperineal mapped biopsies.
- Author
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Diez, Nidia Gómez, de Pablos-Rodríguez, Pedro, Sánchez-Mateos Manzaneque, David, Martín García, María Isabel, Gómez, Paula Pelechano, Benito, María Barrios, Fons, Ana Calatrava, Patiño, Jessica Aliaga, Boronat Catalá, Juan, Gómez-Ferrer Lozano, Álvaro, Gutiérrez, Augusto Wong, Cortés, Ángel García, Backhaus, Miguel Ramírez, Casanova Ramón Borja, Juan, Beamud Cortés, Manel, Domínguez Escrig, José Luis, and García, Antonio Coy
- Subjects
MAGNETIC resonance imaging ,PROSTATE biopsy ,EARLY detection of cancer ,PROSTATE cancer ,PATIENT care ,ENDORECTAL ultrasonography - Abstract
Purpose: To evaluate MRI and histological concordance in prostate cancer (PCa) identification via mapped transperineal biopsies. Methodology: Retrospective per-lesion analysis of patients undergoing MRI and transperineal biopsy at the Valencian Institute of Oncology (2016–2024) using CAPROSIVO PCa data. Patients underwent MRI, with or without regions of interest (ROI), followed by transperineal biopsies (3–5 cores/ROI, 20–30 systematic). Sensitivity (Se), specificity (Sp), negative predictive value (NPV), positive predictive value (PPV), and area under the curve (AUC) were calculated, considering PI-RADS 3 lesions as positive or negative. Gleason Grade Group (GG) > 1 defined clinically significant PCa (csPCa). Results: 1817 lesions were analyzed from 1325 patients (median age 67, median PSA 6.3 ng/ml). 53% MRI were negative, GG > 1 prevalence was 38.4%. MRI-negative cases showed varying PCa rates: 57.4% negative, 30.2% GG 1, and 12.4% GG > 1. PI-RADS 3 lesions had mixed outcomes: 45.6% benign, 13.1% GG 1, and 41.3% GG > 1. 9.2% PI-RADS 4–5 lesions were negative, 9% GG 1, and 81.7% GG > 1. For PI-RADS 3 lesions considered positive, Se, Sp, NPV, PPV, and AUC were 82.9%, 75%, 87.6%, 67.4%, and 0.79 respectively. Considering PI-RADS 3 as negative yielded 64.8% Se, 91% Sp, 80.6% NPV, 81.7% PPV, and 0.78 AUC. Conclusion: MRI and mapped prostate biopsies exhibited moderate concordance. MRI could miss up to one in five csPCa foci and misinterpret one in three ROIs. Careful MRI interpretation is crucial for optimizing patient care. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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