Abstract

Open-top light-sheet (OTLS) microscopy is a technique that allows for high-resolution 3D imaging of tissue specimens and can therefore provide a more detailed assessment of tissue architecture. Given that Gleason grading is based on tissue architecture, we hypothesized that OTLS microscopy would enable us to survey a larger amount of tissue and detect occult prostate cancers in men who had prostate core biopsy specimens initially classified as being benign-appearing who later developed clinically significant prostate cancers. Benign appearing tissue (based on routine pathologic evaluation) from 20 patients who subsequently developed a clinically significant prostate cancer (experimental group) was evaluated with OTLS microscopy and compared to tissue from 20 patients who underwent prostate biopsy and never developed a clinically significant prostate cancer (control group). We compared the incidence of detectable prostate cancer between groups. Baseline clinical characteristics were similar between the experimental and control groups. Three patients (15%) in the control group and one (5%) in the experimental group had suspicious findings on low-resolution OTLS microscopy. Higher resolution OTLS imaging revealed two patients (10%) in the control group had an occult prostate cancer, while no occult cancers were found in the experimental group. In spite of a high pretest probability for the presence of an occult prostate cancer, we did not identify cancer in our experimental group. This may be due to under-sampling at the time of prostate needle biopsy.

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