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Transperineal multiparametric magnetic resonance imaging-ultrasound fusion-targeted prostate biopsy combined with standard template improves perineural invasion detection.

Authors :
Wu CL
Kim M
Wu S
Lin SX
Crotty RK
Harisinghani M
Feldman AS
Dahl DM
Source :
Human pathology [Hum Pathol] 2021 Nov; Vol. 117, pp. 101-107. Date of Electronic Publication: 2021 Aug 28.
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Perineural invasion (PNI) on biopsy is associated with adverse features in prostate cancer (PCa). Transrectal multiparametric magnetic resonance imaging (MRI)-targeted biopsy (TBx) has shown to detect higher presence of PNI than standard template biopsy (SBx). Transperineal biopsy provides effective cancer detection with lower complications than the transrectal approach. We compared PNI detection efficiency between SBx and TBx through transperineal approach. We identified patients with PCa who underwent transperineal TBx and concomitant standard 20-core template SBx from September 2019 to February 2021. Clinical, MRI imaging and biopsy characteristics were evaluated and compared between TBx and SBx. Two hundred thirty-eight patients with PCa underwent concomitant transperineal SBx and TBx procedures. Combined PNI+ (SBxPNI+ and/or TBxPNI+) was identified in 77 of 238 (32.4%) patients. SBx detected 23.9% PNI-positive patients and TBx detected 19.3% PNI-positive patients of all patients with PCa. Patients with PNI were with significantly different clinicopathological characteristics than patients without PNI. Although significantly more positive PCa cores and higher positive PCa core rate were found in the SBx method, patients with SBxPNI+ only shared similar features as TBxPNI+only patients. Of 176 cases with both SBxPCa and TBxPCa, TBx could detect 19 (15.1%) more PNI cases than SBx while SBx could detect 24 (18.3%) more PNI cases than TBx. Multiparametric MRI fusion-targeted biopsy in combination with template biopsy through transperineal approach achieved PNI detection rate over 30% of PCa cases. The increased PNI detection may improve the model to select active surveillance candidates in clinical practice.<br /> (Copyright © 2021. Published by Elsevier Inc.)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1532-8392
Volume :
117
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Human pathology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
34461132
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.humpath.2021.08.008