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- Title
Targeted biopsy of the prostate: does this result in improvement in detection of high‐grade cancer or the occurrence of the Will Rogers phenomenon?
- Authors
Bass, Edward J.; Orczyk, Clement; Grey, Alistair; Freeman, Alex; Jameson, Charles; Punwani, Shonit; Ramachandran, Navin; Allen, Clare; Emberton, Mark; Ahmed, Hashim U.
- Abstract
Objective: To investigate whether patients with Gleason 3 + 4 cancer on transrectal biopsy are upgraded after undergoing transperineal magnetic resonance imaging (MRI)‐targeted biopsy and whether this has implications for current clinical practice. Patients and Methods: In this retrospective analysis we examined 107 consecutive patients presenting at a single tertiary referral centre (July 2012 to July 2016) with prostate cancer of Gleason score 3 + 4 on transrectal ultrasonography (TRUS)‐guided systematic non‐targeted biopsy who then underwent a multiparametric MRI followed by MRI‐targeted transperineal prostate biopsy for accurate risk stratification and localization. Results: The patients' mean (sd) age was 67.0 (8.0) years, and they had a median (interquartile range) PSA concentration of 6.2 (4.7–9.6) ng/mL. Of the 107 patients, 84 (78.5%) had Gleason 3 + 4 on both transrectal systematic biopsy and transperineal MRI‐targeted biopsy. Nineteen patients (17.8%) were upgraded to Gleason 4 + 3, three patients (3.0%) to Gleason 4 + 4 and one patient (1.0%) to Gleason 4 + 5. These differences were significant (P = 0.0006). Likewise, 23/107 patients (22%) had higher‐risk disease based on their targeted biopsies. Conclusion: The use of targeted biopsy in men with impalpable cancer, ultimately upgraded one in five patients from favourable‐intermediate‐ to unfavourable‐intermediate‐risk disease or worse. This has significant clinical implications for men considering active surveillance or radical treatment. Our risk calculators must now be validated using these data from targeted biopsy as the technique becomes widely adopted.
- Subjects
PROSTATE biopsy; GLEASON grading system; MAGNETIC resonance imaging
- Publication
BJU International, 2019, Vol 124, Issue 4, p643
- ISSN
1464-4096
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1111/bju.14806