MRI-Targeted, Systematic, and Combined Biopsy for Prostate Cancer Diagnosis
National Institutes of Health · University of Maryland, Baltimore · +3 more institutions
Abstract
The use of 12-core systematic prostate biopsy is associated with diagnostic inaccuracy that contributes to both overdiagnosis and underdiagnosis of prostate cancer. Biopsies performed with magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) targeting may reduce the misclassification of prostate cancer in men with MRI-visible lesions.
Men with MRI-visible prostate lesions underwent both MRI-targeted and systematic biopsy. The primary outcome was cancer detection according to grade group (i.e., a clustering of Gleason grades). Grade group 1 refers to clinically insignificant disease; grade group 2 or higher, cancer with favorable intermediate risk or worse; and grade group 3 or higher, cancer with unfavorable intermediate risk or worse. Among the men who underwent subsequent radical prostatectomy, upgrading and downgrading of grade group from biopsy to whole-mount histopathological analysis of surgical specimens were recorded. Secondary outcomes were the detection of cancers of grade group 2 or higher and grade group 3 or higher, cancer detection stratified by previous biopsy status, and grade reclassification between biopsy and radical prostatectomy.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 65.65
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 42
Authors
18Topics & keywords
- Overdiagnosis
- Prostate cancer
- Medicine
- Magnetic resonance imaging
- Prostate
- Biopsy
- Radiology
- Cancer
- Good health and well-being