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Three-year experience of a dedicated prostate mpMRI pre-biopsy programme and effect on timed cancer diagnostic pathways.

Authors :
Barrett, T.
Slough, R.
Sushentsev, N.
Shaida, N.
Koo, B.C.
Caglic, I.
Kozlov, V.
Warren, A.Y.
Thankappannair, V.
Pinnock, C.
Shah, N.
Saeb-Parsy, K.
Gnanapragasam, V.J.
Sala, E.
Kastner, C.
Source :
Clinical Radiology. Nov2019, Vol. 74 Issue 11, p894.e1-894.e9. 1p.
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

<bold>Aim: </bold>To evaluate the effect of pre-biopsy magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) on cancer diagnostic times, and to report MRI-directed pathology outcomes.<bold>Materials and Methods: </bold>In total, 1483 patients were referred with prostate cancer suspicion during a 30-month period. Upfront MRI was performed in 745 patients: 332 MRIs in the 15 months prior to dedicated scanning slots (group 1), and 413 in the 15 months post-introduction (group 2). A further 88 patients had initial MRI following clinical assessment. Biopsy via the transrectal (TR) or transperineal (TP) approach was performed, with MRI/ultrasound fusion for MRI targets. Clinically significant cancer (csPCa) was defined as Gleason ≥3+4. Negative MRIs were defined as Likert 1-2. Per-case clinical decisions were taken to biopsy or not.<bold>Results: </bold>44.4% of patients avoided biopsy. 484/833 (58.1%) MRIs were negative; 37.4% of these patients had biopsy with a negative predictive value (NPV) of 92.8% for Gleason ≥3+4 and 98.3% for ≥4+3. Overall prostate cancer prevalence was 34.3% (24.6% csPCa). In 323 MRI-positive cases, any cancer was present in 78.9% (csPCa 60.4%). Of the 1483 patients, 1232 (83.1%) completed all diagnostic tests within 28 days. Upfront MRI patients met this standard in 621/833 (74.5%), improving from 66.9% to 81.1% with reserved slots (group 2) with a reduced diagnostic time from median 25.5 to 20.9 days. Biopsy scheduling delayed the pathway in 69.7%, with MRI responsible in 22.3%, reducing to 10.3% in group 2. TP biopsies met the 28-day standard in significantly less cases (29.7%), compared to TR (67.4%, p<0.0001).<bold>Conclusion: </bold>Reserved MRI slots reduces time-to-diagnosis, and upfront MRI safely avoids biopsy in a significant proportion of men, whilst maintaining expected csPCa detection rates. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00099260
Volume :
74
Issue :
11
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Clinical Radiology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
139142119
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.crad.2019.06.004