33 results on '"Jaspal, Virdi"'
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2. MP73-08 FOCAL ABLATIVE SALVAGE THERAPY FOR RADIO-RECURRENT PROSTATE CANCER: A 10 YEAR EXPERIENCE OF ONCOLOGICAL AND SAFETY OUTCOMES IN 276 PATIENTS
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Deepika Reddy, Taimur Shah, Emma Cullen, Mariana Bertoncelli Tanaka, Tim Dudderidge, Stuart McCracken, Raj Nigam, Jaspal Virdi, Iqbal Shergill, Clement Orczyk, Manit Arya, Caroline Moore, Mark Emberton, and Hashim Ahmed
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Urology - Published
- 2023
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3. MP73-11 MEDIUM TERM OUTCOMES FOLLOWING PRIMARY FOCAL CRYOTHERAPY FOR LOCALISED PROSTATE CANCER IN 323 PATIENTS, A MULTI-INSTITUTIONAL OBSERVATIONAL STUDY OVER 10 YEARS
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Deepika Reddy, Max Peters, Marieke Van Son, Mariana Bertoncelli Tanaka, Philipp Huber, Derek Lomas, Arnas Rakauskas, Saiful Miah, David Eldred-Evans, Emma Cullen, Tim Dudderidge, Stuart McCracken, Damian Greene, Raj Nigam, Neil McCartan, Massimo Valerio, Clement Orczyk, Jaspal Virdi, Manit Arya, Taimur Shah, and Hashim Ahmed
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Urology - Published
- 2023
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4. Corrigendum to 'Magnetic Resonance Imaging and targeted biopsies compared to transperineal mapping biopsies prior to salvage focal therapy/ablation in localised and metastatic recurrent prostate cancer after radiotherapy. Primary Outcomes from the FORECAST Trial' [Eur Urol 2022;81(6):598–605]
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Taimur T. Shah, Abi Kanthabalan, Marjorie Otieno, Menelaos Pavlou, Rumana Omar, Sola Adeleke, Francesco Giganti, Chris Brew-Graves, Norman R. Williams, Jack Grierson, Haroon Miah, Amr Emara, Athar Haroon, Arash Latifoltojar, Harbir Sidhu, Joey Clemente, Alex Freeman, Clement Orczyk, Ashok Nikapota, Tim Dudderidge, Richard G. Hindley, Jaspal Virdi, Manit Arya, Heather Payne, Anita Mitra, Jamshed Bomanji, Mathias Winkler, Gail Horan, Caroline M. Moore, Mark Emberton, Shonit Punwani, and Hashim U. Ahmed
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Urology - Published
- 2023
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5. Conventional radical versus focal treatment for localised prostate cancer: a propensity score weighted comparison of 6-year tumour control
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Deepika Reddy, Raj Persad, Manit Arya, R. Hindley, Mark Emberton, Raj Nigam, M. Winkler, Jochem R. N. van der Voort van Zyp, Hashim U. Ahmed, A. Emara, Clement Orczyk, Caroline M. Moore, Taimur T. Shah, Tim Dudderidge, Stephen Robinson, Stephen Mangar, Feargus Hosking-Jervis, Marieke J. van Son, Stuart McCracken, Alison Falconer, Jaspal Virdi, Henry Lewi, Jan J. W. Lagendijk, and Max Peters
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Cancer Research ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Prostatectomy ,business.industry ,Urology ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Brachytherapy ,030232 urology & nephrology ,Cryotherapy ,medicine.disease ,Androgen deprivation therapy ,Radiation therapy ,03 medical and health sciences ,Prostate cancer ,0302 clinical medicine ,Oncology ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Propensity score matching ,medicine ,business ,Watchful waiting - Abstract
For localised prostate cancer, focal therapy offers an organ-sparing alternative to radical treatments (radiotherapy or prostatectomy). Currently, there is no randomised comparative effectiveness data evaluating cancer control of both strategies. Following the eligibility criteria PSA
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- 2021
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6. Focal therapy compared to radical prostatectomy for non-metastatic prostate cancer: a propensity score-matched study
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Feargus Hosking-Jervis, Henry Lewi, Chris Ogden, Max Peters, Suks Minhas, Daniel Ball, Deepika Reddy, Saiful Miah, Hashim U. Ahmed, Damian Greene, Raj Persad, Naveed Afzal, Enrique Gómez Gómez, Caroline M. Moore, M. Valerio, Peter S.N. van Rossum, Stuart McCracken, David Eldred Evans, Neil McCartan, Richard Hindley, Mathias Winkler, Mark Emberton, Taimur T. Shah, Na Hyun Kim, Raj Nigam, Stephanie Guillaumier, Jaspal Virdi, A. Emara, Tim Dudderidge, Manit Arya, and Marieke J. van Son
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Male ,Cancer Research ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Urology ,medicine.medical_treatment ,030232 urology & nephrology ,Cryotherapy ,Systemic therapy ,03 medical and health sciences ,Prostate cancer ,0302 clinical medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Prospective Studies ,Propensity Score ,Aged ,Prostatectomy ,business.industry ,Prostatic Neoplasms ,Cancer ,Middle Aged ,Prognosis ,medicine.disease ,Survival Rate ,Focal therapy ,Oncology ,Case-Control Studies ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Propensity score matching ,Outcomes research ,business ,Follow-Up Studies - Abstract
Focal therapy (FT) ablates areas of prostate cancer rather than treating the whole gland. We compared oncological outcomes of FT to radical prostatectomy (RP). Using prospective multicentre databases of 761 FT and 572 RP cases (November/2005-September/2018), patients with PSA
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- 2021
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7. MP55-06 FOCAL ABLATIVE SALVAGE THERAPY FOR RADIO-RECURRENT PROSTATE CANCER: 6 YEAR ONCOLOGICAL AND SAFETY OUTCOMES
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Deepika Reddy, Max Peters, Taimur Shah, Marieke van Son, Mariana Tanaka Bertoncelli, Philipp Huber, Derek Lomas, Arnas Rakauskas, Saiful Miah, David Eldred-Evans, Stephanie Guillaumier, Feargus Hosking-Jervis, Ryan Engle, Tim Dudderidge, Richard Hindley, Amr Emara, Raj Nigam, Neil McCartan, Massimo Valerio, Naveed Afzal, Henry Lewi, Clement Orczyk, Chris Ogden, Iqbal Shergill, Raj Persad, Jaspal Virdi, Stuart McCracken, Damian Greene, Caroline Moore, Manit Arya, Mathias Winkler, Mark Emberton, and Hashim Ahmed
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Urology - Published
- 2022
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8. MP55-01 CANCER CONTROL OUTCOMES FOLLOWING FOCAL THERAPY USING HIFU IN 1,379 MEN WITH NON-METASTATIC PROSTATE CANCER: A MULTI-INSTITUTE 15-YEAR EXPERIENCE
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Deepika Reddy, Max Peters, Taimur Shah, Marieke van Son, Mariana Tanaka Bertoncelli, Philipp Huber, Derek Lomas, Arnas Rakauskas, Saiful Miah, David Eldred-Evans, Stephanie Guillaumier, Feargus Hosking-Jervis, Ryan Engle, Tim Dudderidge, Richard Hindley, Amr Emara, Raj Nigam, Neil McCartan, Massimo Valerio, Naveed Afzal, Henry Lewi, Clement Orczyk, Chris Ogden, Iqbal Shergill, Raj Persad, Jaspal Virdi, Caroline Moore, Manit Arya, Mathias Winkler, Mark Emberton, and Hashim Ahmed
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Urology - Published
- 2022
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9. Evaluation of functional outcomes after a second focal high-intensity focused ultrasonography (HIFU) procedure in men with primary localized, non-metastatic prostate cancer: results from the HIFU Evaluation and Assessment of Treatment (HEAT) registry
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Catherine Lovegrove, Stephanie Guillaumier, Mark Emberton, Neil McCartan, Hashim U. Ahmed, Raj Nigam, Henry Lewi, Suks Minhas, Chris Ogden, Raj Persad, Richard Hindley, Jaspal Virdi, Caroline M. Moore, Mathias Winkler, Manit Arya, Feargus Hosking-Jervis, Tim Dudderidge, Max Peters, Naveed Afzal, and Taimur T. Shah
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Urology ,High intensity focused ,030232 urology & nephrology ,03 medical and health sciences ,Prostate cancer ,Postoperative Complications ,0302 clinical medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Non metastatic ,Patient Reported Outcome Measures ,Prospective Studies ,Ultrasound, High-Intensity Focused, Transrectal ,Aged ,business.industry ,Ultrasound ,Prostate ,Outcome measures ,Prostatic Neoplasms ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Treatment Outcome ,Erectile dysfunction ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,International Prostate Symptom Score ,Ultrasonography ,business - Abstract
Objectives To assess change in functional outcomes after a second focal high-intensity focused ultrasonography (HIFU) treatment compared with outcomes after one focal HIFU treatment. Patients and methods In this multicentre study (2005-2016), 821 men underwent focal HIFU for localized non-metastatic prostate cancer. The patient-reported outcome measures of International Prostate Symptom Score (IPSS), pad usage and erectile function (EF) score were prospectively collected for up to 3 years. To be included in the study, completion of at least one follow-up questionnaire was required. The primary outcome was comparison of change in functional outcomes between baseline and follow-up after one focal HIFU procedure vs after a second focal HIFU procedure, using IPSS, Expanded Prostate Cancer Index Composite (EPIC) and International Index of Erectile Function (IIEF) questionnaires. Results Of 821 men, 654 underwent one focal HIFU procedure and 167 underwent a second focal HIFU procedure. A total of 355 (54.3%) men undergoing one focal HIFU procedure and 65 (38.9%) with a second focal HIFU procedure returned follow-up questionnaires, respectively. The mean age and prostate-specific antigen level were 66.4 and 65.6 years, and 7.9 and 8.4 ng/mL, respectively. After one focal HIFU treatment, the mean change in IPSS was -0.03 (P = 0.02) and in IIEF (EF score) it was -0.4 (P = 0.02) at 1-2 years, with no subsequent decline. Absolute rates of erectile dysfunction increased from 9.9% to 20.8% (P = 0.08), leak-free continence decreased from 77.9% to 72.8% (P = 0.06) and pad-free continence from 98.6% to 94.8% (P = 0.07) at 1-2 years, respectively. IPSS prior to second focal HIFU treatment compared to baseline IPSS prior to first focal HIFU treatment was lower by -1.3 (P = 0.02), but mean IPSS change was +1.4 at 1-2 years (P = 0.03) and +1.2 at 2-3 years (P = 0.003) after the second focal HIFU treatment. The mean change in EF score after the second focal HIFU treatment was -0.2 at 1-2 years (P = 0.60) and -0.5 at 2-3 years (P = 0.10), with 17.8% and 6.2% of men with new erectile dysfunction. The rate of new pad use was 1.8% at 1-2 years and 2.6% at 2-3 years. Conclusion A second focal HIFU procedure causes minor detrimental effects on urinary function and EF. These data can be used to counsel patients with non-metastatic prostate cancer prior to considering HIFU therapy.
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- 2020
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10. Magnetic Resonance Imaging and Targeted Biopsies Compared to Transperineal Mapping Biopsies Before Focal Ablation in Localised and Metastatic Recurrent Prostate Cancer After Radiotherapy
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Taimur T. Shah, Abi Kanthabalan, Marjorie Otieno, Menelaos Pavlou, Rumana Omar, Sola Adeleke, Francesco Giganti, Chris Brew-Graves, Norman R. Williams, Jack Grierson, Haroon Miah, Amr Emara, Athar Haroon, Arash Latifoltojar, Harbir Sidhu, Joey Clemente, Alex Freeman, Clement Orczyk, Ashok Nikapota, Tim Dudderidge, Richard G. Hindley, Jaspal Virdi, Manit Arya, Heather Payne, Anita Mitra, Jamshed Bomanji, Mathias Winkler, Gail Horan, Caroline M. Moore, Mark Emberton, Shonit Punwani, and Hashim U. Ahmed
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Image-Guided Biopsy ,Male ,Urology ,Biopsy ,Prostate ,Prostatic Neoplasms ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Article ,Cohort Studies ,Urinary Incontinence ,Quality of Life ,Humans ,Prospective Studies ,Neoplasm Recurrence, Local - Abstract
BACKGROUND: Recurrent prostate cancer after radiotherapy occurs in one in five patients. The efficacy of prostate magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) in recurrent cancer has not been established. Furthermore, high-quality data on new minimally invasive salvage focal ablative treatments are needed. OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the role of prostate MRI in detection of prostate cancer recurring after radiotherapy. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: The FORECAST trial was both a paired-cohort diagnostic study evaluating prostate multiparametric MRI (mpMRI) and MRI-targeted biopsies in the detection of recurrent cancer and a cohort study evaluating focal ablation at six UK centres. A total of 181 patients were recruited, with 155 included in the MRI analysis and 93 in the focal ablation analysis. INTERVENTION: Patients underwent choline positron emission tomography/computed tomography and a bone scan, followed by prostate mpMRI and MRI-targeted and transperineal template-mapping (TTPM) biopsies. MRI was reported blind to other tests. Those eligible underwent subsequent focal ablation. An amendment in December 2014 permitted focal ablation in patients with metastases. OUTCOME MEASUREMENTS AND STATISTICAL ANALYSIS: Primary outcomes were the sensitivity of MRI and MRI-targeted biopsies for cancer detection, and urinary incontinence after focal ablation. A key secondary outcome was progression-free survival (PFS). RESULTS AND LIMITATIONS: Staging whole-body imaging revealed localised cancer in 128 patients (71%), with involvement of pelvic nodes only in 13 (7%) and metastases in 38 (21%). The sensitivity of MRI-targeted biopsy was 92% (95% confidence interval [CI] 83–97%). The specificity and positive and negative predictive values were 75% (95% CI 45–92%), 94% (95% CI 86–98%), and 65% (95% CI 38–86%), respectively. Four cancer (6%) were missed by TTPM biopsy and six (8%) were missed by MRI-targeted biopsy. The overall MRI sensitivity for detection of any cancer was 94% (95% CI 88–98%). The specificity and positive and negative predictive values were 18% (95% CI 7–35%), 80% (95% CI 73–87%), and 46% (95% CI 19–75%), respectively. Among 93 patients undergoing focal ablation, urinary incontinence occurred in 15 (16%) and five (5%) had a grade ≥3 adverse event, with no rectal injuries. Median follow-up was 27 mo (interquartile range 18–36); overall PFS was 66% (interquartile range 54–75%) at 24 mo. CONCLUSIONS: Patients should undergo prostate MRI with both systematic and targeted biopsies to optimise cancer detection. Focal ablation for areas of intraprostatic recurrence preserves continence in the majority, with good early cancer control. PATIENT SUMMARY: We investigated the role of magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scans of the prostate and MRI-targeted biopsies in outcomes after cancer-targeted high-intensity ultrasound or cryotherapy in patients with recurrent cancer after radiotherapy. Our findings show that these patients should undergo prostate MRI with both systematic and targeted biopsies and then ablative treatment focused on areas of recurrent cancer to preserve their quality of life.
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- 2021
11. Focal HIFU therapy for anterior compared to posterior prostate cancer lesions
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Jaspal Virdi, Hashim U. Ahmed, Mark Emberton, Raj Persad, Silvan Boxler, Feargus Hosking-Jervis, Richard Hindley, Caroline M. Moore, Lucas Leemann, Philipp M. Huber, Henry Lewi, Neil McCartan, Mathias Winkler, Raj Nigam, Chris Odgen, Stephanie Guillaumier, Naveed Afzal, Manit Arya, and Tim Dudderidge
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Nephrology ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Prostate biopsy ,Urology ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Cryotherapy ,610 Medicine & health ,Prostate cancer ,Prostate ,Focal therapy ,Internal medicine ,Biopsy ,medicine ,Humans ,Ultrasound, High-Intensity Focused, Transrectal ,Aged ,Retrospective Studies ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Cancer ,Prostatic Neoplasms ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,High-intensity focused ultrasound ,High intensity focused ultrasound ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Original Article ,Biochemical failure ,business - Abstract
Objective To compare cancer control in anterior compared to posterior prostate cancer lesions treated with a focal HIFU therapy approach. Materials and methods In a prospectively maintained national database, 598 patients underwent focal HIFU (Sonablate®500) (March/2007–November/2016). Follow-up occurred with 3-monthly clinic visits and PSA testing in the first year with PSA, every 6–12 months with mpMRI with biopsy for MRI-suspicion of recurrence. Treatment failure was any secondary treatment (ADT/chemotherapy, cryotherapy, EBRT, RRP, or re-HIFU), tumour recurrence with Gleason ≥ 3 + 4 on prostate biopsy without further treatment or metastases/prostate cancer-related mortality. Cases with anterior cancer were compared to those with posterior disease. Results 267 patients were analysed following eligibility criteria. 45 had an anterior focal-HIFU and 222 had a posterior focal-HIFU. Median age was 64 years and 66 years, respectively, with similar PSA level of 7.5 ng/ml and 6.92 ng/ml. 84% and 82%, respectively, had Gleason 3 + 4, 16% in both groups had Gleason 4 + 3, 0% and 2% had Gleason 4 + 4. Prostate volume was similar (33 ml vs. 36 ml, p = 0.315); median number of positive cores in biopsies was different in anterior and posterior tumours (7 vs. 5, p = 0.009), while medium cancer core length, and maximal cancer percentage of core were comparable. 17/45 (37.8%) anterior focal-HIFU patients compared to 45/222 (20.3%) posterior focal-HIFU patients required further treatment (p = 0.019). Conclusion Treating anterior prostate cancer lesions with focal HIFU may be less effective compared to posterior tumours.
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- 2021
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12. Cancer Control Outcomes Following Focal Therapy Using High-intensity Focused Ultrasound in 1379 Men with Nonmetastatic Prostate Cancer: A Multi-institute 15-year Experience
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Deepika Reddy, Max Peters, Taimur T. Shah, Marieke van Son, Mariana Bertoncelli Tanaka, Philipp M. Huber, Derek Lomas, Arnas Rakauskas, Saiful Miah, David Eldred-Evans, Stephanie Guillaumier, Feargus Hosking-Jervis, Ryan Engle, Tim Dudderidge, Richard G. Hindley, Amr Emara, Raj Nigam, Neil McCartan, Massimo Valerio, Naveed Afzal, Henry Lewi, Clement Orczyk, Chris Ogden, Iqbal Shergill, Raj Persad, Jaspal Virdi, Caroline M. Moore, Manit Arya, Mathias Winkler, Mark Emberton, and Hashim U. Ahmed
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Male ,Salvage Therapy ,Treatment Outcome ,Urology ,Prostate ,Humans ,Prostatic Neoplasms ,Neoplasm Recurrence, Local ,Prostate-Specific Antigen ,Ultrasound, High-Intensity Focused, Transrectal - Abstract
Focal therapy aims to treat areas of cancer to confer oncological control whilst reducing treatment-related functional detriment.To report oncological outcomes and adverse events following focal high-intensity focused ultrasound (HIFU) for treating nonmetastatic prostate cancer.An analysis of 1379 patients with ≥6 mo of follow-up prospectively recorded in the HIFU Evaluation and Assessment of Treatment (HEAT) registry from 13 UK centres (2005-2020) was conducted. Five or more years of follow-up was available for 325 (24%) patients. Focal HIFU therapy used a transrectal ultrasound-guided device (Sonablate; Sonacare Inc., Charlotte, NC, USA).Failure-free survival (FFS) was primarily defined as avoidance of no evidence of disease to require salvage whole-gland or systemic treatment, or metastases or prostate cancer-specific mortality. Differences in FFS between D'Amico risk groups were determined using a log-rank analysis. Adverse events were reported using Clavien-Dindo classification.The median (interquartile range) age was 66 (60-71) yr and prostate-specific antigen was 6.9 (4.9-9.4) ng/ml with D'Amico intermediate risk in 65% (896/1379) and high risk in 28% (386/1379). The overall median follow-up was 32 (17-58) mo; for those with ≥5 yr of follow-up, it was 82 (72-94). A total of 252 patients had repeat focal treatment due to residual or recurrent cancer; overall 92 patients required salvage whole-gland treatment. Kaplan-Meier 7-yr FFS was 69% (64-74%). Seven-year FFS in intermediate- and high-risk cancers was 68% (95% confidence interval [CI] 62-75%) and 65% (95% CI 56-74%; p = 0.3). Clavien-Dindo2 adverse events occurred in 0.5% (7/1379). The median 10-yr follow-up is lacking.Focal HIFU in carefully selected patients with clinically significant prostate cancer, with six and three of ten patients having, respectively, intermediate- and high-risk cancer, has good cancer control in the medium term.Focal high-intensity focused ultrasound treatment to areas of prostate with cancer can provide an alternative to treating the whole prostate. This treatment modality has good medium-term cancer control over 7 yr, although 10-yr data are not yet available.
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- 2021
13. MRI and Targeted Biopsies Compared to Transperineal Mapping Biopsies Prior to Focal Ablation in Recurrent Prostate Cancer after Radiotherapy
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Taimur Shah, Abi Kanthabalan, Marjorie Otieno, Menelaos Pavlou, Rumana Omar, Sola Adeleke, Francesco Giganti, Chris Brew-Graves, Norman R. Williams, Jack Grierson, Haroon Miah, Amr Emara, Athar Haroon, Arash Latifoltojar, Harbir Sidhu, Joey Clemente, Alex Freeman, Clement Orczyk, Ashok Nikapota, Tim Dudderidge, Richard G. Hindley, Jaspal Virdi, Manit Arya, Heather Payne, Anita Mitra, Jamshed Bomanji, Mathias Winkler, Gail Horan, Caroline Moore, Mark Emberton, Shonit Punwani, and Hashim U. Ahmed
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History ,Polymers and Plastics ,Business and International Management ,Industrial and Manufacturing Engineering - Published
- 2021
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14. Conventional radical versus focal treatment for localised prostate cancer: a propensity score weighted comparison of 6-year tumour control
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Marieke J, van Son, Max, Peters, Deepika, Reddy, Taimur T, Shah, Feargus, Hosking-Jervis, Stephen, Robinson, Jan J W, Lagendijk, Stephen, Mangar, Tim, Dudderidge, Stuart, McCracken, Richard G, Hindley, Amr, Emara, Raj, Nigam, Raj, Persad, Jaspal, Virdi, Henry, Lewi, Caroline, Moore, Clement, Orczyk, Mark, Emberton, Manit, Arya, Hashim U, Ahmed, Jochem R N, van der Voort van Zyp, Matt, Winkler, and Alison, Falconer
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Male ,Prostatectomy ,Salvage Therapy ,Brachytherapy ,Prostatic Neoplasms ,Androgen Antagonists ,Antineoplastic Agents ,Middle Aged ,Prostate-Specific Antigen ,United Kingdom ,Survival Rate ,Cryotherapy ,Biomarkers, Tumor ,Disease Progression ,High-Intensity Focused Ultrasound Ablation ,Humans ,Registries ,Neoplasm Grading ,Propensity Score ,Aged ,Neoplasm Staging ,Netherlands ,Retrospective Studies - Abstract
For localised prostate cancer, focal therapy offers an organ-sparing alternative to radical treatments (radiotherapy or prostatectomy). Currently, there is no randomised comparative effectiveness data evaluating cancer control of both strategies.Following the eligibility criteria PSA 20 ng/mL, Gleason score ≤ 7 and T-stage ≤ T2c, we included 830 radical (440 radiotherapy, 390 prostatectomy) and 530 focal therapy (cryotherapy, high-intensity focused ultrasound or high-dose-rate brachytherapy) patients treated between 2005 and 2018 from multicentre registries in the Netherlands and the UK. A propensity score weighted (PSW) analysis was performed to compare failure-free survival (FFS), with failure defined as salvage treatment, metastatic disease, systemic treatment (androgen deprivation therapy or chemotherapy), or progression to watchful waiting. The secondary outcome was overall survival (OS). Median (IQR) follow-up in each cohort was 55 (28-83) and 62 (42-83) months, respectively.At baseline, radical patients had higher PSA (10.3 versus 7.9) and higher-grade disease (31% ISUP 3 versus 11%) compared to focal patients. After PSW, all covariates were balanced (SMD 0.1). 6-year weighted FFS was higher after radical therapy (80.3%, 95% CI 73.9-87.3) than after focal therapy (72.8%, 95% CI 66.8-79.8) although not statistically significant (p = 0.1). 6-year weighted OS was significantly lower after radical therapy (93.4%, 95% CI 90.1-95.2 versus 97.5%, 95% CI 94-99.9; p = 0.02). When compared in a three-way analysis, focal and LRP patients had a higher risk of treatment failure than EBRT patients (p 0.001), but EBRT patients had a higher risk of mortality than focal patients (p = 0.008).Within the limitations of a cohort-based analysis in which residual confounders are likely to exist, we found no clinically relevant difference in cancer control conferred by focal therapy compared to radical therapy at 6 years.
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- 2020
15. An Exploratory Study of Dose Escalation
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Philipp M, Huber, Naveed, Afzal, Manit, Arya, Silvan, Boxler, Tim, Dudderidge, Mark, Emberton, Stephanie, Guillaumier, Richard G, Hindley, Feargus, Hosking-Jervis, Lucas, Leemann, Henry, Lewi, Neil, McCartan, Caroline M, Moore, Raj, Nigam, Chris, Odgen, Raj, Persad, George N, Thalmann, Jaspal, Virdi, Mathias, Winkler, and Hashim U, Ahmed
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Male ,Treatment Outcome ,Humans ,Prostatic Neoplasms ,Middle Aged ,Neoplasm Recurrence, Local ,Prostate-Specific Antigen ,Reference Standards ,Ultrasound, High-Intensity Focused, Transrectal ,Aged - Published
- 2020
16. Prostate Specific Antigen Criteria to Diagnose Failure of Cancer Control following Focal Therapy of Nonmetastatic Prostate Cancer Using High Intensity Focused Ultrasound
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Mark Emberton, Richard Hindley, Feargus Hosking-Jervis, Jaspal Virdi, Raj Persad, Manit Arya, Silvan Boxler, Hashim U. Ahmed, Henry Lewi, George N. Thalmann, Naveed Afzal, Caroline M. Moore, Stephanie Guillaumier, Mathias Winkler, Lucas Leemann, Neil McCartan, Philipp M. Huber, Tim Dudderidge, Raj Nigam, Chris Odgen, Wellcome Trust, University College London Hospitals Charity, and Prostate Cancer UK
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Oncology ,Male ,Radiofrequency ablation ,medicine.medical_treatment ,030232 urology & nephrology ,prostatic neoplasms ,law.invention ,Prostate cancer ,0302 clinical medicine ,Cancer control ,law ,Prostate ,Prospective Studies ,Treatment Failure ,Prospective cohort study ,610 Medicine & health ,Neoadjuvant therapy ,Ultrasound, High-Intensity Focused, Transrectal ,OUTCOMES ,ultrasonography ,Urology & Nephrology ,Middle Aged ,Neoadjuvant Therapy ,Prostate-specific antigen ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Kallikreins ,radiofrequency ablation ,Life Sciences & Biomedicine ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Urology ,Sensitivity and Specificity ,03 medical and health sciences ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,prostate-specific antigen ,Humans ,Multiparametric Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Aged ,Science & Technology ,business.industry ,Androgen Antagonists ,1103 Clinical Sciences ,medicine.disease ,High-intensity focused ultrasound ,Feasibility Studies ,Neoplasm Recurrence, Local ,business ,CONSENSUS ,Follow-Up Studies - Abstract
PURPOSE: We determined whether prostate specific antigen criteria after focal high intensity focused ultrasound to treat prostate cancer could diagnose treatment failure. MATERIALS AND METHODS: A total of 598 patients in a prospectively maintained national database underwent focal high intensity focused ultrasound with a Sonablate® 500 device from March 2007 to November 2016. Followup consisted of 3-month clinic visits and prostate specific antigen testing in year 1 with prostate specific antigen measurement every 6 to 12 months and multiparametric magnetic resonance imaging with biopsy for magnetic resonance imaging suspicious for recurrence. Treatment failure was considered any secondary treatment, tumor recurrence with Gleason 3 + 4 or greater disease on prostate biopsy without further treatment or metastasis and/or prostate cancer related mortality. To diagnose failure we evaluated a series of nadir + x thresholds with x values of 0.1 to 2.0 ng/ml. RESULTS: Median patient age was 65 years (IQR 60-71) and the median Gleason score was 7 (range 6-9). Gleason 3 + 4 or greater disease was present in 80% of cases. Tumors were radiologically staged as T1c-T2c in 522 of the 596 patients (88%) and as and T3a/b in 74 (12.4%). Baseline median prostate specific antigen was 7.80 ng/ml (IQR 5.96-10.45) in failed cases and 6.77 ng/ml (IQR 2.65-9.71) in cases without failure. Optimal performance according to the Youden index to indicate the most appropriate nadir + x at all analyzed time points at 3-month intervals showed that nadir + 1.0 ng/ml would have 27.3% to 100% sensitivity and 39.4% to 85.6% specificity depending on the time of evaluation in the first 3 years. Nadir + 1.5 ng/ml showed 18.2% to 100% sensitivity and 60.6% to 91.8% specificity with nadir + 2.0 ng/ml leading to similar sensitivity and specificity ranges. Nadir + 1.0 ng/ml at 12 months and nadir + 1.5 ng/ml at 24 and 36 months had 100% sensitivity and 96.1% to 100% negative predictive value. CONCLUSIONS: Following focal high intensity focused ultrasound a prostate specific antigen nadir of 1.0 ng/ml at 12 months and 1.5 ng/ml at 24 to 36 months might be used to triage men requiring magnetic resonance imaging and biopsy. These data need prospective validation.
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- 2020
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17. Performance characteristics of multiparametric-MRI at a non-academic hospital using transperineal template mapping biopsy as a reference standard
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Jolanta Mckenzie, Veeru Kasivisvanathan, Jaspal Virdi, Manit Arya, Hashim U. Ahmed, Neophytos Petrides, Edwin Michael Chau, Zaid Aldin, Mark Emberton, Wellcome Trust, and University College London Hospitals Charity
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medicine.medical_specialty ,CARCINOMA ,ACCURACY ,030232 urology & nephrology ,03 medical and health sciences ,Magnetic resonance imaging ,0302 clinical medicine ,Prostate ,Biopsy ,medicine ,Predictive value of tests ,Clinical significance ,COMBINATION ,Reference standards ,Science & Technology ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Cancer ,Needle biopsy ,LOCALIZATION ,medicine.disease ,SIGNIFICANT PROSTATE-CANCER ,Clinical trial ,Orthopedics ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Surgery ,Radiology ,Prostatic neoplasm ,business ,Life Sciences & Biomedicine - Abstract
Objectives To evaluate diagnostic accuracy of mpMRI in a non-academic hospital using transperineal template prostate mapping (TPM) biopsy as a reference standard. Secondary objectives included evaluating why mpMRI missed significant cancer. Materials and methods 101 men received pre-biopsy mpMRI and TPM-biopsy over 16 months. Disease status was assigned at hemigland level. Primary histological definition of clinical significance was Gleason grade >/ = 4 + 3 or maximum cancer core length (MCCL) >/ = 6 mm. Positive mpMRI was defined as Prostate Imaging Reporting and Data System (PI-RADS) score >/ = 3. Results Median age 69 (IQR 62–76). Median PSA 7 ng/ml (IQR 4.6–9.8). mpMRI had sensitivity 76.9%, specificity 60.7%, PPV 40.4% and NPV 88.3% at primary definitions. For detecting any Gleason >/ = 7 mpMRI had sensitivity 73.2%, specificity 60.3%, PPV 41.4% and NPV 85.4%. Mean MCCL was lower where significant cancer was missed compared to those correctly identified (5.8 mm versus 7.7 mm respectively, p = 0.035). Conclusion mpMRI performance characteristics were very encouraging when compared to contemporary clinical trials. In a non-academic hospital setting, negative mpMRI was just as good at ruling-out significant disease, though the ability of positive mpMRI to accurately detect significant disease was lower. An mpMRI-guided diagnostic pathway should be accompanied by appropriate mpMRI protocol optimisation, training, and quality control.
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- 2018
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18. MRI and targeted biopsies compared to transperineal mapping biopsies for targeted ablation in recurrent prostate cancer after radiotherapy: Primary outcomes of the FORECAST trial
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Norman R. Williams, Shonit Punwani, A. Nikapota, J. Bomanji, H. Payne, A. Mitra, Chris Brew-Graves, Francesco Giganti, Tim Dudderidge, Alex Freeman, Abi Kanthabalan, Jaspal Virdi, Caroline M. Moore, Manit Arya, Athar Haroon, Harbir S. Sidhu, Hashim U. Ahmed, Mark Emberton, M. Pavlou, M. Winkler, R. Hindley, Clement Orczyk, S. Adeleke, Taimur T. Shah, and Gail Horan
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Radiation therapy ,medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Urology ,medicine.medical_treatment ,medicine ,Recurrent prostate cancer ,Radiology ,business ,Ablation - Published
- 2021
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19. Focal ablative salvage therapy for radio-recurrent prostate cancer: 6 year oncological and safety outcomes
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Arnas Rakauskas, Saiful Miah, Max Peters, Rajendra Persad, Stuart McCracken, Stephanie Guillaumier, Hashim U. Ahmed, Clement Orczyk, Deepika Reddy, M. Van Son, Feargus Hosking-Jervis, Caroline M. Moore, Philipp M. Huber, Mark Emberton, Manit Arya, M. Bertoncelli Tanaka, Derek Lomas, David Eldred-Evans, M. Winkler, Raj Nigam, A. Emara, Tim Dudderidge, R. Hindley, Taimur T. Shah, and Jaspal Virdi
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medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Urology ,Ablative case ,Salvage therapy ,Medicine ,Recurrent prostate cancer ,Radiology ,business - Published
- 2021
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20. Cancer control outcomes following focal therapy using HIFU in 1,829 men with non-metastatic prostate cancer treated over 15 years
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Stephanie Guillaumier, Arnas Rakauskas, Manit Arya, Mark Emberton, Raj Nigam, Hashim U. Ahmed, M. Van Son, Derek Lomas, Jaspal Virdi, Caroline M. Moore, Saiful Miah, Max Peters, Taimur T. Shah, Henry Lewi, Naveed Afzal, Chris Ogden, Deepika Reddy, R. Hindley, Philipp M. Huber, M. Winkler, M. Valerio, A. Emara, Tim Dudderidge, Clement Orczyk, and Rajendra Persad
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Oncology ,Focal therapy ,Prostate cancer ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Cancer control ,business.industry ,Urology ,Internal medicine ,Non metastatic ,Medicine ,business ,medicine.disease - Published
- 2021
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21. Adult type granulosa cell tumour of the testis: a case report
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Vitaly Mezentsev, Hebah Ali, Jolanta McKenzie, and Jaspal Virdi
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Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,endocrine system ,business.industry ,Urology ,Granulosa cell ,granulosa cell tumours ,Clinical course ,Granulosa cell tumour ,Disease ,medicine.disease ,testicular tumours ,Oncology ,Nephrology ,Elderly population ,Medicine ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Surgery ,Orchiectomy ,Testicular tumours ,Adult type ,business - Abstract
Primary testicular tumour is unusual in elderly population. We present a case of 74 year old with adult type granulosa cell tumour, located at the right testis. The patient had right radical inquinal orchiectomy. The tumour composed of a cystic component which had a number of different areas. Many areas showed a granulosa cell morphology with Call-Exner bodies. Our report highlights one more challenging case of testicular tumours in elderly, which are quite problematic in terms of prognosis and management. Long-term follow up is recommended, since metastases of the disease may appear late in the clinical course.
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- 2017
22. Focal therapy compared to radical prostatectomy for non-metastatic prostate cancer: A propensity matched study
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Hashim U. Ahmed, Suks Minhas, Chris Ogden, P.S.N. Van Rossum, Feargus Hosking-Jervis, Raj Persad, Raj Nigam, Neil McCartan, Richard Hindley, Manit Arya, Taimur T. Shah, Stephanie Guillaumier, Damian Greene, M. Valerio, Mark Emberton, Deepika Reddy, M.J. Van Son, Naveed Afzal, Henry Lewi, Mathias Winkler, E. Gomez-Gomez, M. Peters, Caroline M. Moore, Tim Dudderidge, and Jaspal Virdi
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medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Prostatectomy ,Urology ,medicine.medical_treatment ,lcsh:Diseases of the genitourinary system. Urology ,lcsh:RC870-923 ,lcsh:Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,medicine.disease ,lcsh:RC254-282 ,Focal therapy ,Prostate cancer ,Medicine ,Non metastatic ,business - Published
- 2020
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23. MP78-10 A COMPARISON OF CANCER CONTROL OUTCOMES AT 5 YEARS OF FOCAL THERAPY (USING HIFU & CRYOTHERAPY) TO RADICAL PROSTATECTOMY FOR CLINICALLY SIGNIFICANT NON-METASTATIC PROSTATE CANCER: PROPENSITY SCORE-MATCHED ANALYSIS
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Caroline M. Moore, Jaspal Virdi, Daniel Ball, Feargus Hosking-Jervis, Raj Nigam, Deepika Reddy, Naveed Afzal, Hashim U. Ahmed, Mark Emberton, Neil McCartan, McCracken Stuart, Tim Dudderidge, Stephanie Guillaumier, Massimo Valerio, Saiful Miah, Max Peters, Peter S.N. van Rossum, David Eldred-Evans, Annie Kim, Enrique Gómez Gómez, Raj Persad, Henry Lewi, Manit Arya, Chris Ogden, Richard Hindley, Mathias Winkler, Suks Minhas, Taimur T. Shah, and Greene Damian
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Prostatectomy ,business.industry ,Urology ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Cryotherapy ,medicine.disease ,Focal therapy ,Prostate cancer ,Cancer control ,Propensity score matching ,medicine ,Non metastatic ,business - Abstract
INTRODUCTION AND OBJECTIVES:Focal therapy (FT) has a low side-effect profile but there is uncertainty about its medium-long term cancer control compared to radical approaches. Both focal HIFU and f...
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- 2019
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24. Oncological outcomes of 356 patients undergoing salvage focal ablative HIFU or cryotherapy following radiation failure
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Raj Nigam, Jaspal Virdi, Mark Emberton, Raj Persad, Naveed Afzal, Manit Arya, Stuart McCracken, Deepika Reddy, Stephanie Guillaumier, Hashim U. Ahmed, Mathias Winkler, Richard Hindley, Feargus Hosking-Jervis, Caroline M. Moore, Taimur T. Shah, Tim Dudderidge, Neil McCartan, Clement Orczyk, Marieke van Son, and Henry Lewi
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Cancer Research ,medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Cryotherapy ,medicine.disease ,Radiation failure ,Systemic therapy ,Radiation therapy ,Prostate cancer ,Oncology ,Ablative case ,medicine ,Radiology ,business ,Salvage prostatectomy - Abstract
5582 Background: Patients that have previously failed radiotherapy for prostate cancer is usually limited to systemic therapy due to morbidity from salvage prostatectomy. We reviewed the outcomes following focal salvage ablative therapy with HIFU or cryotherapy within the UK’s HEAT and ICE registries. Methods: 356 consecutive patients underwent focal ablative treatment after initial radiation treatment failure (28/1/2004-1/10/2019, 194 (54.5%) underwent HIFU (posterior recurrence) and 162 (45.5%) underwent cryotherapy (mostly anterior or T3b). Primary outcome was failure-free survival (FFS) defined as no systemic therapy, whole-gland treatment, metastases or prostate cancer-specific death. Secondary outcomes were adverse events and overall survival. Results: Median (IQR) age was 69years (65-73) and PSA (IQR) was 4.0ng/ml (1-7-7.2). Overall median (IQR) follow-up was 41.3 months (21.4-58.5). Quadrant ablation was performed in 128 (36.0%), hemi-ablation performed in 64 (18.0%), hockey-stick in 5 (1.4%) and 159 (43.8%) had unknown ablative patterns. Due to histological or MRI proven recurrence/residual disease, 31 (8.7%) underwent further focal salvage re-treatment. FFS (95%CI) at 3 and 6 years were 81% (76-87%) and 75% (68-83%) respectively. Median (IQR) time to failure was 15.5 months (19.7). Overall survival (95%CI) at 3 and 6 years were 97% (95-100%) and 88% (81-96%) respectively. Prostate-specific mortality was 2.8%. Overall 3 (0.8%) patients were managed for fistula formation, 16 (4.5%) were treated for UTIs. Conclusions: Salvage focal ablative therapy for radio-recurrent prostate cancer is safe and provides good short to medium-term oncological control. The FORECAST study is awaited to further determine oncological outcomes in this cohort.
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- 2020
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25. MP77-15 A MULTI-CENTRE RANDOMISED CONTROLLED TRIAL ASSESSING WHETHER MRI-TARGETED BIOPSY IS NON-INFERIOR TO STANDARD TRANS-RECTAL ULTRASOUND GUIDED BIOPSY FOR THE DIAGNOSIS OF CLINICALLY SIGNIFICANT PROSTATE CANCER IN MEN WITHOUT PRIOR BIOPSY - THE PRECISION STUDY: PROSTATE EVALUATION FOR CLINICALLY IMPORTANT DISEASE, SAMPLING USING IMAGE-GUIDANCE OR NOT? (NCT02380027)
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Samir S. Taneja, Geert Villeirs, Silvan Boxler, Arnauld Villers, Boris Hadaschik, Sebastien Crouzet, Francesco Giganti, Jaspal Virdi, Veeru Kasivisvanathan, Chris Brew-Graves, Valeria Panebianco, Lars Budäus, Antti Rannikko, Markku H. Vaarala, Caroline M. Moore, Grégoire Robert, Steve Morris, Maneesh Ghei, Alex Freeman, Alberto Briganti, Norman R. Williams, Mark Emberton, Scott E. Eggener, Wulphert Venderink, Paras B. Singh, Yemisi Takwoingi, Richard Hindley, Alain Ruffion, Marcelo Borghi, Franck Bladou, Jim C. Hu, Lance Mynderse, Daniel Margolis, Clare Allen, Shonit Punwani, Giles O. Hellawell, Inderbir S. Gill, Monique J. Roobol, Peter A. Pinto, and Laurence Klotz
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medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Urology ,Disease ,medicine.disease ,Targeted biopsy ,law.invention ,Prostate cancer ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Randomized controlled trial ,law ,Prostate ,Biopsy ,medicine ,Sampling (medicine) ,Radiology ,Multi centre ,business - Published
- 2018
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26. MP30-11 PREDICTORS OF POOR FUNCTIONAL OUTCOMES AFTER FOCAL HIGH INTENSITY FOCUSSED ULTRASOUND (HIFU)
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Stephanie Guillaumier, Chris Ogden, Raj Persad, Raj Nigam, Manit Arya, Naveed Afzal, Jaspal Virdi, Richard Hindley, Hashim U. Ahmed, Taimur T. Shah, Mark Emberton, Tim Dudderidge, Max Peters, Feargus Hosking-Jervis, Caroline M. Moore, Henry Lewi, Mathias Winkler, Karishma Shah, Suks Minhas, and Neil McCartan
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medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Urology ,High intensity ,Ultrasound ,medicine ,Radiology ,business - Published
- 2018
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27. MP30-10 HIFU DOSE ESCALATION LEADS TO FEWER RECURRENCES IN FOLLOWING FOCAL HIFU IN PROSTATE CANCER
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Jaspal Virdi, Stephanie Guillaumier, Hashim U. Ahmed, George N. Thalmann, Mark Emberton, Lucas Leemann, Neil McCartan, Naveed Afzal, Philipp M. Huber, Caroline M. Moore, Mathias Winkler, Henry Lewi, Raj Persad, Andrew Cornaby, Richard J. Hindley, Chris Ogden, Manit Arya, Karishma Shah, Raj Nigam, Tim Dudderidge, Silvan Boxler, and Susan A. Charman
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Prostate cancer ,business.industry ,Urology ,medicine ,Dose escalation ,Radiology ,medicine.disease ,business - Published
- 2018
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28. PD34-07 PSA FAILS TO PREDICT TREATMENT FAILURE IN FOCAL HIGH-INTENSITY FOCUSED ULTRASOUND THERAPY IN PROSTATE CANCER
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Silvan Boxler, Raj Persad, Neil McCartan, Manit Arya, Jaspal Virdi, Hashim U. Ahmed, Lucas Leemann, Philipp M. Huber, George N. Thalmann, Susan C. Charman, Andrew Cornaby, Karishma Shah, Henry Lewi, Stephanie Guillaumier, Mark Emberton, Naveed Afzal, Caroline M. Moore, Mathias Winkler, Raj Nigam, Richard J. Hindley, Chris Ogden, and Tim Dudderidge
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Prostate cancer ,medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Urology ,medicine.medical_treatment ,medicine ,Radiology ,medicine.disease ,business ,High-intensity focused ultrasound ,Treatment failure - Published
- 2018
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29. A Multicentre Study of 5-year Outcomes Following Focal Therapy in Treating Clinically Significant Nonmetastatic Prostate Cancer
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Stephanie, Guillaumier, Max, Peters, Manit, Arya, Naveed, Afzal, Susan, Charman, Tim, Dudderidge, Feargus, Hosking-Jervis, Richard G, Hindley, Henry, Lewi, Neil, McCartan, Caroline M, Moore, Raj, Nigam, Chris, Ogden, Raj, Persad, Karishma, Shah, Jan, van der Meulen, Jaspal, Virdi, Mathias, Winkler, Mark, Emberton, and Hashim U, Ahmed
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Male ,Biopsy ,Prostate ,Prostatic Neoplasms ,Middle Aged ,Prostate-Specific Antigen ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Survival Analysis ,United Kingdom ,Ultrasonic Waves ,Outcome Assessment, Health Care ,Humans ,Prospective Studies ,Registries ,Ultrasound, High-Intensity Focused, Transrectal ,Aged ,Follow-Up Studies ,Neoplasm Staging - Abstract
Clinically significant nonmetastatic prostate cancer (PCa) is currently treated using whole-gland therapy. This approach is effective but can have urinary, sexual, and rectal side effects.To report on 5-yr PCa control following focal high-intensity focused ultrasound (HIFU) therapy to treat individual areas of cancer within the prostate.This was a prospective study of 625 consecutive patients with nonmetastatic clinically significant PCa undergoing focal HIFU therapy (Sonablate) in secondary care centres between January 1, 2006 and December 31, 2015. A minimum of 6-mo follow-up was available for599 patients. Intermediate- or high-risk PCa was found in 505 patients (84%).Disease was localised using multiparametric magnetic resonance imaging (mpMRI) combined with targeted and systematic biopsies, or transperineal mapping biopsies. Areas of significant disease were treated. Follow-up included prostate-specific antigen (PSA) measurement, mpMRI, and biopsies.The primary endpoint, failure-free survival (FFS), was defined as freedom from radical or systemic therapy, metastases, and cancer-specific mortality.The median follow-up was 56 mo (interquartile range [IQR] 35-70). The median age was 65 yr (IQR 61-71) and median preoperative PSA was 7.2 ng/ml (IQR 5.2-10.0). FFS was 99% (95% confidence interval [CI] 98-100%) at 1 yr, 92% (95% CI 90-95%) at 3 yr, and 88% (95% 85-91%) at 5 yr. For the whole patient cohort, metastasis-free, cancer-specific, and overall survival at 5 yr was 98% (95% CI 97-99%), 100%, and 99% (95% CI 97-100%), respectively. Among patients who returned validated questionnaires, 241/247 (98%) achieved complete pad-free urinary continence and none required more than 1 pad/d. Limitations include the lack of long-term follow-up.Focal therapy for select patients with clinically significant nonmetastatic prostate cancer is effective in the medium term and has a low probability of side effects.In this multicentre study of 625 patients undergoing focal therapy using high-intensity focused ultrasound (HIFU), failure-free survival, metastasis-free survival, cancer-specific survival, and overall survival were 88%, 98%, 100%, and 99%, respectively. Urinary incontinence (any pad use) was 2%. Focal HIFU therapy for patients with clinically significant prostate cancer that has not spread has a low probability of side effects and is effective at 5 yr.
- Published
- 2017
30. Prostate evaluation for clinically important disease: Sampling using image-guidance or not? (The PRECISION study, NCT02380027)
- Author
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Veeru Kasivisvanathan, Alain Ruffion, Richard Hindley, Jaspal Virdi, Francesco Giganti, J. Hu, Valeria Panebianco, L.A. Mynderse, Franck Bladou, Shonit Punwani, Daniel Margolis, Antti Rannikko, Marcelo Borghi, Clare Allen, Norman R. Williams, Chris Brew-Graves, Wulphert Venderink, Monique J. Roobol, Inderbir S. Gill, A. Freeman, Laurence Klotz, S. Boxler, Samir S. Taneja, Peter A. Pinto, Grégoire Robert, A. Villers, Giles Hellawell, Yemisi Takwoingi, Markku H. Vaarala, Caroline M. Moore, Sebastien Crouzet, Lars Budäus, M. Emberton, Paras B. Singh, Stephen Morris, Boris Hadaschik, M. Ghei, Geert Villeirs, Alberto Briganti, and Scott E. Eggener
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Urology ,030232 urology & nephrology ,Sampling (statistics) ,Disease ,030218 nuclear medicine & medical imaging ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Prostate ,Medicine ,Medical physics ,business ,Image guidance - Published
- 2018
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31. 1955. Propensity Score-Matched Comparison of Focal High Intensity Focused Ultrasound (HIFU) to Laparoscopic Radical Prostatectomy (LRP) for Clinically Significant Localised Prostate Cancer
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Na Hyun Kim, Hashim U. Ahmed, Stephanie Guillaumier, David Eldred-Evans, Daniel Ball, Karishma Shah, Richard Hindley, Jaspal Virdi, Naveed Afzai, Caroline Moors, Saiful Miah, Chris Ogden, Enrique Gómez Gómez, Mark Emberton, Tim Dudderidge, Ashley McFarlane, Raj Nigam, Raj Persad, Manit Arya, Mathias Winkler, Neil McCartan, Feargus Hosking-Jervis, Henry Lewl, Max Peters, and Taimur T. Shah
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Laparoscopic radical prostatectomy ,business.industry ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Urology ,General Medicine ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,medicine.disease ,High-intensity focused ultrasound ,03 medical and health sciences ,Prostate cancer ,0302 clinical medicine ,Oncology ,Propensity score matching ,medicine ,Surgery ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Published
- 2018
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32. Focal HIFU: Higher recurrence rate in treatment of anterior compared to posterior lesions in prostate cancer
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Raj Nigam, Manit Arya, Susan A. Charman, Mathias Winkler, Philipp M. Huber, R.J. Hindley, Tim Dudderidge, Caroline M. Moore, Naveed Afzal, Jaspal Virdi, S. Boxler, C. Ogden, Hashim U. Ahmed, M. Emberton, George N. Thalmann, Andrew Cornaby, Stephanie Guillaumier, Karishma Shah, Rajendra Persad, L.T. Leemann, N. Mc Cartan, and Henry Lewi
- Subjects
03 medical and health sciences ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Prostate cancer ,0302 clinical medicine ,business.industry ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Urology ,030232 urology & nephrology ,medicine ,Radiology ,medicine.disease ,business - Published
- 2018
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33. 841 Medium term outcomes following focal HIFU for the treatment of non-metastatic prostate cancer: A UK registry analysis of 625 cases
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Sami Hamid, Neil McCartan, Hashim U. Ahmed, Tim Dudderidge, Manit Arya, Andrew Cornaby, Karishma Shah, M. Emberton, J van der Meulen, R. Hindley, Rajendra Persad, Stephanie Guillaumier, Henry Lewi, Caroline M. Moore, Susan A. Charman, Raj Nigam, Naveed Afzal, and Jaspal Virdi
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Oncology ,Prostate cancer ,medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Urology ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Non metastatic ,medicine.disease ,business ,Medium term - Published
- 2016
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