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Natural history of widespread high grade prostatic intraepithelial neoplasia and atypical small acinar proliferation: should we rebiopsy them all?

Authors :
Marco Agnello
Luisa Delsedime
Paolo Gontero
Donatella Pacchioni
Andrea Giordano
M. Barale
Riccardo Faletti
Alessandro Marquis
Claudia Filippini
Marco Falcone
Giorgio Calleris
Marco Oderda
Lorenzo Daniele
Matteo Rosazza
Giancarlo Marra
Source :
Scandinavian journal of urology. 55(2)
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

To evaluate the premalignant potential of high-grade prostatic intraepithelial neoplasia (HGPIN) and atypical small acinar proliferation (ASAP).Patients diagnosed with monofocal HGPIN (mHGPIN), widespread HGPIN (≥4 cores, wHGPIN) and/or ASAP who underwent at least one rebiopsy during their follow-up, were enrolled. All enrollment biopsies underwent central pathologic revision. Risks for PCa were estimated using Fine and Gray method for competing risk.Pathologic revision changed the original diagnosis in 32.3% of cases. Among 336 cases enrolled, PCa was diagnosed in 164 (48.8%), and more specifically in 20 (30.3%) mHGPIN, 10 (34.5%) wHGPIN, 101 (54.0%) ASAP, and 33 (61.1%) HGPIN + ASAP (mean follow-up 124 months). Most PCa were Gleason score 6(3 + 3) (51.0%) and 7(3 + 4) (34.3%). On multivariate analysis, HGPIN + ASAP (HR 2.76,The diagnosis of ASAP and HGPIN strongly relies on the expertise of dedicated uro-pathologists. Finding of ASAP is a strong risk factor for a subsequent PCa diagnosis, advising a rebiopsy, possibly within 3 months. m/wHGPIN should not be routinely rebiopsied.

Details

ISSN :
21681813
Volume :
55
Issue :
2
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Scandinavian journal of urology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....826badd69bd95e8861f9b350b41da81c