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Local anaesthetic transperineal (LATP) prostate biopsy using a probe‐mounted transperineal access system: a multicentre prospective outcome analysis

Authors :
Rick Popert
Tom Leslie
Richard J. Bryant
Tom Austin
J. Francisco Lopez
Freddie C. Hamdy
Catherine Lovegrove
Charlotte Foley
Utsav D. Reddy
Nithesh Ranasinha
Raj Persad
Thomas Reeves
Luke Stroman
Ben Eddy
Stefanos Bolomytis
C. Richard Bell
Dominic Hodgson
Simon Brewster
Yiannis Philippou
Alastair D. Lamb
Aaron Leiblich
Mohammed Elsaghir
Angus Campbell
Jasper Bondad
Altan Omer
Curtis Phelan
Simon van Rij
Wayne Lam
Source :
BJU International. 128:311-318
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Wiley, 2021.

Abstract

OBJECTIVES To assess the feasibility of local anaesthetic transperineal (LATP) technique using a single-freehand transperineal (TP) access device, and report initial prostate cancer (PCa) detection, infection rates, and tolerability. PATIENTS AND METHODS Observational study of a multicentre prospective cohort, including all consecutive cases. LATP was performed in three settings: (i) first biopsy in suspected PCa, (ii) confirmatory biopsies for active surveillance, and (iii) repeat biopsy in suspected PCa. All patients received pre-procedure antibiotics according to local hospital guidelines. Local anaesthesia was achieved by perineal skin infiltration and periprostatic nerve block without sedation. Ginsburg protocol principles were followed for systematic biopsies including cognitive magnetic resonance imaging-targeted biopsies when needed using the PrecisionPoint™ TP access device. Procedure-related complications and oncological outcomes were prospectively and consecutively collected. A validated questionnaire was used in a subset of centres to collect data on patient-reported outcome measures (PROMs). RESULTS Some 1218 patients underwent LATP biopsies at 10 centres: 55%, 24%, and 21% for each of the three settings, respectively. Any grade PCa was diagnosed in 816 patients (67%), of which 634 (52% of total) had clinically significant disease. Two cases of sepsis were documented (0.16%) and urinary retention was observed in 19 patients (1.6%). PROMs were distributed to 419 patients, with a 56% response rate (n = 234). In these men, pain during the biopsy was described as either 'not at all' or 'a little' painful by 64% of patients. Haematuria was the most common reported symptom (77%). When exploring attitude to re-biopsy, 48% said it would be 'not a problem' and in contrast 8.1% would consider it a 'major problem'. Most of the patients (81%) described the biopsy as a 'minor or moderate procedure tolerable under local anaesthesia', while 5.6% perceived it as a 'major procedure that requires general anaesthesia'. CONCLUSION Our data suggest that LATP biopsy using a TP access system mounted to the ultrasound probe achieves excellent PCa detection, with a very low sepsis rate, and is safe and well tolerated. We believe a randomised controlled trial comparing LATP with transrectal ultrasound-guided biopsy (TRUS) to investigate the relative trade-offs between each biopsy technique would be helpful.

Details

ISSN :
1464410X and 14644096
Volume :
128
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
BJU International
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....fc28c2f7fa45380f35edc2e4ceda7f0b
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1111/bju.15337