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Prostate MRI Update 2016: MR-TRUS Fusion Biopsy Katarzyna J. Macura, MD, PhD, FACR, FSCBTMR The Russell H. Morgan Department of Radiology and Radiological Science, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD SCBT•MR 2016 1 Background • 1 mln prostate biopsies are performed annually in the USA during the PSA era • Blind biopsies are misleading – Underdetection of significant cancer (anterior prostate or apex) – 35% falsely negative – Overdetection of small indolent cancer of little clinical significance (up to 50% of detected cancers) • > 26,000 deaths projected in 2016 • MRI-ultrasound fusion for guidance of targeted prostate biopsy emerged as an important tool for diagnosis of clinically significant prostate cancer, while minimizing detection of indolent cancer Prostate Cancer at a Glance Lifetime Risk: 14.0% of men will be diagnosed with prostate cancer during their lifetime Prevalence: In 2013, estimated 2,850,139 men living with prostate cancer in the US NCI - http://seer.cancer.gov/statfacts/html/prost.html Indications for MR-TRUS fusion biopsy • • • • Elevated PSA and suspected cancer, previous negative TRUS biopsy Known cancer considered for active surveillance Known cancer to determine disease status during active surveillance Candidates for focal therapy De-novo diagnosis of prostate cancer: biopsy naïve patient TRUS Nodule 20 mm PI-RADS 5 59M, Gleason 3+4=7 (80% of 1 core), G3+3=6 tumor (2 cores, 50% each), and HGPIN De-novo diagnosis of prostate cancer: multiple negative TRUS biopsies Nodule 10 mm 71M, Gleason 4+4=8 involving 2 cores (30%, 40%) PI-RADS 4 Extruded BPH nodule or PZ nodule? Nodule 8 mm circumscribed 75M, benign prostatic tissue PI-RADS 2-3 Cancer vs. Extruded BPH Elevated PSA, negative prior TRUS x 2: typically missed on TRUS anterior nodule Nodule 16mm PI-RADS 5 65M, Gleason 3+3=6 involving 3 cores (100%, 40%, 5%). Patient in active surveillance: establish the risk, monitor stability Nodule 10mm PI-RADS 4 75M, Gleason score 3+3=6 60% of core F-U 2-years later Comparison standard vs. targeted BX 61M, PSA from 5.7 to 18 ng/mL over 8 years negative prior TRUS biopsies x2 Nodule 16 mm, capsule bulge PI-RADS 5 Systematic BX: 1) RIGHT APEX: BENIGN. 2) RIGHT MID: BENIGN. 3) RIGHT BASE: HGPIN. 4) LEFT APEX: BENIGN. 5) LEFT MID: BENIGN WITH CHRONIC INFLAMMATION. 6) LEFT BASE: BENIGN WITH CHRONIC INFLAMMATION. Targeted BX: PROSTATE, Target 1 RIGHT BASE MID: PROSTATIC ADENOCARCINOMA, GLEASON SCORE 4 + 3 = 7 INVOLVING 80% OF ONE (1) OF TWO (2) CORES. (70% GLEASON PATTERN 4) . Radical prostatectomy: Adenocarcinoma (conventional, NOS) GLEASON SCORE - DOMINANT NODULE: 4 + 5 = 9 GLEASON SCORE - SECONDARY NODULE: 3 + 3 = 6 LOCATION - DOMINANT NODULE: Right; Posterolateral/Posterior; Apex/Mid/Base LOCATION - SECONDARY NODULE: Left; Posterolateral; Mid LOCAL EXTENT: Organ confined; MARGINS: Negative Comparison of MR/Ultrasound Fusion–Guided Biopsy With Ultrasound-Guided Biopsy for the Diagnosis of Prostate Cancer JAMA. 2015;313(4):390-397 Targeted biopsy diagnosed 30% more high-risk cancers vs. standard biopsy and 17% fewer low-risk cancers. A Randomized Controlled Trial To Assess and Compare the Outcomes of Two-core Prostate Biopsy Guided by Fused Magnetic Resonance and Transrectal Ultrasound Images and Traditional 12-core Systematic Biopsy Clinically significant cancer two-core MRI/TRUS-TB 38% vs. 12-core RB in control 49% Prospective Evaluation of the Prostate Imaging Reporting and Data System Version 2 for Prostate Cancer Detection Cancer detection rate: PI-RADS 5 - 78% PI-RADS 4 - 30% PI-RADS 3 - 16% PI-RADS 2 – 22% THE JOURNAL OF UROLOGY, Vol. 196, 690-696, September 2016 Conclusion: The current criteria result in a high false-positive rate and stricter criteria may be needed to increase the cancer detection rate for PI-RADS scores of 3, 4, and 5. 14 Correlation of PI-RADS score of regions of interest (ROIs) on mpMRI with targeted biopsy (bx) findings (benign, Gleason score or GS 6, GS >7) in the AS cohort (A), confirmatory biopsy cohort (B) and targeted biopsy cohort (C). The Role of Multiparametric Magnetic Resonance Imaging/Ultrasound Fusion Biopsy in Active Surveillance. Eur Urol. 2016 Augmenting MRI with clinical variables Prostate Health Index No men with PHI<27 and PI-RADS≤3 had grade group ≥2 cancer. Several men with low PI-RADS scores and PHI>27 had clinically significant PCa. Gleason Score 1 GS 3+3=6 Pathologic Grade Group: 2 GS 3+4=7 3 GS 4+3=7 4 GS 4+4=8 5 GS9 or GS10 Scatter plot of PHI by PI-RADS score and biopsy results (n=121) Tosoian JJ et al. JHU, in press AUA – SAR Consensus Statement AUA – SAR Consensus Statement • “When high-quality prostate MRI is available, it should be strongly considered in any patient with a prior negative biopsy who has persistent clinical suspicion for prostate cancer and who is undergoing a repeat biopsy.” • “If MRI is done, it should be performed, interpreted, and reported in accordance with PI-RADS V2 guidelines.“ • “Patients receiving a PI-RADS assessment category of 3-5 warrant repeat biopsy with image guided targeting.” • “At least two targeted cores should be obtained from each MRI-defined target.” THANK YOU! SCBT•MR 2016 19