Back to Search
Start Over
Risk of Prostate Cancer after a Negative Magnetic Resonance Imaging Guided Biopsy
- Source :
- The Journal of urology. 204(6)
- Publication Year :
- 2020
-
Abstract
- Magnetic resonance imaging guided biopsy which reveals no cancer may impart reassurance beyond that offered by ultrasound guided biopsy. However, followup of men after a negative magnetic resonance imaging guided biopsy has been mostly by prostate specific antigen testing and reports of followup tissue confirmation are few. We investigated the incidence of clinically significant prostate cancer in such men who, because of persistent cancer suspicion, subsequently underwent a repeat magnetic resonance imaging guided biopsy.Subjects were all men with a negative initial magnetic resonance imaging guided biopsy who underwent at least 1 further magnetic resonance imaging guided biopsy due to continued clinical suspicion of clinically significant prostate cancer (September 2009 to July 2019). Biopsies were magnetic resonance imaging-ultrasound fusion with targeted and systematic cores. Regions of interest from initial magnetic resonance imaging and any new regions of interest at followup magnetic resonance imaging guided biopsy were targeted. The primary end point was detection of clinically significant prostate cancer (Gleason Grade Group 2 or greater).Of 2,716 men 733 had a negative initial magnetic resonance imaging guided biopsy. Study subjects were 73/733 who underwent followup magnetic resonance imaging guided biopsy. Median (IQR) age and prostate specific antigen density were 64 years (59-67) and 0.12 ng/ml/cc (0.08-0.17), respectively. Baseline PI-RADS® scores were 3 or greater in 74%. At followup magnetic resonance imaging guided biopsy (median 2.4 years, IQR 1.3-3.6), 17/73 (23%) were diagnosed with clinically significant prostate cancer. When followup magnetic resonance imaging revealed a lesion (PI-RADS 3 or greater), clinically significant prostate cancer was found in 17/53 (32%). When followup magnetic resonance imaging was negative (PI-RADS less than 3), cancer was not found (0/20) (p0.01). Overall 54% of men with PI-RADS 5 at followup magnetic resonance imaging guided biopsy were found to have clinically significant prostate cancer.Men with negative magnetic resonance imaging following an initial negative magnetic resonance imaging guided biopsy are unlikely to harbor clinically significant prostate cancer and may avoid repeat biopsy. However, when lesions are seen on followup magnetic resonance imaging, repeat magnetic resonance imaging guided biopsy is warranted.
- Subjects :
- Image-Guided Biopsy
Male
medicine.medical_specialty
Urology
Magnetic resonance imaging guided biopsy
Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Interventional
Multimodal Imaging
Risk Assessment
Prostate cancer
Predictive Value of Tests
Biopsy
Medicine
Humans
False Negative Reactions
Ultrasonography, Interventional
Aged
medicine.diagnostic_test
business.industry
Incidence
Prostate
Cancer
Prostatic Neoplasms
Reproducibility of Results
Magnetic resonance imaging
Middle Aged
equipment and supplies
medicine.disease
Practice Guidelines as Topic
Ultrasound-Guided Biopsy
Radiology
Biopsy, Large-Core Needle
business
human activities
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 15273792
- Volume :
- 204
- Issue :
- 6
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- The Journal of urology
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....79a59abd1088ff9e5e6f538574c02f62