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The significance of the extent of tissue embedding for the detection of incidental prostate carcinoma on transurethral prostate resection material: the more, the better?

Authors :
Köllermann, Jens
Hoeh, Benedikt
Ruppel, Daniel
Smith, Kevin
Reis, Henning
Wenzel, Mike
Preisser, Felix
Kosiba, Marina
Mandel, Philipp
Karakiewicz, Pierre I.
Becker, Andreas
Chun, Felix K. H.
Wild, Peter
Kluth, Luis A.
Source :
Virchows Archiv: European Journal of Pathology; Sep2022, Vol. 481 Issue 3, p387-396, 10p
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

The aim of this study is to investigate the incidental prostate cancer (iPCa) detection rates of different embedding methods in a large, contemporary cohort of patients with bladder outlet obstruction (BOO) treated with transurethral surgery. We relied on an institutional tertiary-care database to identify BOO patients who underwent either transurethral loop resection or laser (Holmium:yttrium–aluminium garnet) enucleation of the prostate (HoLEP) between 01/2012 and 12/2019. Embedding methods differed with regard to the extent of the additional prostate tissue submitted following the first ten cassettes of primary embedding (cohort A: one [additional] cassette/10 g residual tissue vs. cohort B: complete embedding of the residual tissue). Detection rates of iPCa among the different embedding methods were compared. Subsequently, subgroup analyses by embedding protocol were repeated in HoLEP-treated patients only. In the overall cohort, the iPCa detection rate was 11% (46/420). In cohort A (n = 299), tissue embedding resulted in a median of 8 cassettes/patient (range 1–38) vs. a median of 15 (range 2–74) in cohort B (n = 121) (p <.001). The iPCa detection rate was 8% (23/299) and 19% (23/121) in cohort A vs. cohort B, respectively (p <.001). Virtual reduction of the number of tissue cassettes to ten cassettes resulted in a iPCa detection rate of 96% in both cohorts, missing one stage T1a/ISUP grade 1 carcinoma. Increasing the number of cassettes by two and eight cassettes, respectively, resulted in a detection rate of 100% in both cohorts without revealing high-grade carcinomas. Subgroup analyses in HoLEP patients confirmed these findings, demonstrated by a 100 vs. 96% iPCa detection rate following examination of the first ten cassettes, missing one case of T1a/ISUP 1. Examination of 8 additional cassettes resulted in a 100% detection rate. The extent of embedding of material obtained from transurethral prostate resection correlates with the iPCa detection rate. However, the submission of 10 cassettes appears to be a reasonable threshold to reduce resource utilization while maintaining secure cancer detection. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
09456317
Volume :
481
Issue :
3
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Virchows Archiv: European Journal of Pathology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
159197684
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00428-022-03331-6