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Magnetic Resonance Imaging-Guided Biopsy in Active Surveillance of Prostate Cancer

Authors :
Elizabeth Tran
S. Raman
Nitin Yerram
Vidit Sharma
Peter L. Choyke
Wayne Brisbane
Michael Ahdoot
Rajiv Jayadevan
Maria J. Merino
Ryan Chuang
Alan Priester
Danielle Barsa
Anthony Sisk
Merdie Delfin
Peter A. Pinto
Michael Daneshvar
Leonard S. Marks
Ely Felker
Bradford J. Wood
Lorna Kwan
Baris Turkbey
Luke P. O'Connor
Robert E. Reiter
Adam Kinnaird
Source :
The Journal of urology. 207(4)
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

The underlying premise of prostate cancer active surveillance (AS) is that cancers likely to metastasize will be recognized and eliminated before cancer-related disease can ensue. Our study was designed to determine the prostate cancer upgrading rate when biopsy guided by magnetic resonance imaging (MRGBx) is used before entry and during AS.The cohort included 519 men with low- or intermediate-risk prostate cancer who enrolled in prospective studies (NCT00949819 and NCT00102544) between February 2008 and February 2020. Subjects were preliminarily diagnosed with Gleason Grade Group (GG) 1 cancer; AS began when subsequent MRGBx confirmed GG1 or GG2. Participants underwent confirmatory MRGBx (targeted and systematic) followed by surveillance MRGBx approximately every 12 to 24 months. The primary outcome was tumor upgrading to ≥GG3.Upgrading to ≥GG3 was found in 92 men after a median followup of 4.8 years (IQR 3.1-6.5) after confirmatory MRGBx. Upgrade-free probability after 5 years was 0.85 (95% CI 0.81-0.88). Cancer detected in a magnetic resonance imaging lesion at confirmatory MRGBx increased risk of subsequent upgrading during AS (HR 2.8; 95% CI 1.3-6.0), as did presence of GG2 (HR 2.9; 95% CI 1.1-8.2) In men who upgraded ≥GG3 during AS, upgrading was detected by targeted cores only in 27%, systematic cores only in 25% and both in 47%. In 63 men undergoing prostatectomy, upgrading from MRGBx was found in only 5 (8%).When AS begins and follows with MRGBx (targeted and systematic), upgrading rate (≥GG3) is greater when tumor is initially present within a magnetic resonance imaging lesion or when pathology is GG2 than when these features are absent.

Details

ISSN :
15273792
Volume :
207
Issue :
4
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The Journal of urology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....3340737f21552a832378989a8483f40a