Abstract

To assess the efficacy of 2-core prostate biopsy in advanced prostate cancer patients. This included a retrospective analysis of 12-core prostate biopsies and a prospective validation that a reduced number of cores are sufficient for histopathological diagnosis. The first phase analyzed retrospective data from 12-core prostate biopsies between January 2013 and 2018. In the second phase, from January 2018 to January 2022, in a prospective setting, patients with PSA > 75ng/dl underwent bone scans first. Those with positive bone scans underwent a 2-core biopsy. Cancer detection rate and complications were analyzed to validate the findings of the first phase. In the retrospective analysis, the number of positive cores in metastatic disease was 12 in 93 (73.8%), 11 in 14 (11.1%), and 10 in 7 (5.6%) patients. Using probability analysis, 94% of patients with metastasis could be detected with a single core and 97.8% with a 2-core biopsy. In the prospective analysis, 52 patients with PSA > 75 were enrolled. 3/52 (5.7%) patients had a negative bone scan. 49 were assigned for 2-core biopsy, out of which 48 (97.9%) had a positive result. One patient underwent a repeat 12-core biopsy. The prospective cohort's complications (p = 0.003) and pain score (p = 0.03) were lower compared to patients who underwent standard 12-core biopsies during phase one of the study period. A 2-core biopsy is adequate in almost all patients with metastatic prostate cancer with PSA > 75, and this avoids excess complications and morbidity associated with a systematic 12-core prostate biopsy.

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