Abstract
The presence and extent of prostatitis on the patients' preimplant biopsy slides was correlated with their postimplant course to determine if any relationship exists between histological prostatitis and postimplant morbidity. Biopsy slides from 56 patients treated with I-125 (144 Gy, TG-43), Pd-103 (125 Gy, NIST-1999), or Pd-103 plus supplemental external beam radiation (20-44 Gy) were studied. As part of ongoing prospective protocols, treatment-related morbidity is monitored by mailed questionnaires at 1, 3, 6, 12, and 24 months postimplant, using standard American Urologic Association (I-PSS) and Radiation Therapy Oncology Group criteria. Patient's preimplant biopsies, stained with standard hematoxylin and eosin, were retrieved for review by one uropathologist (LT). Separate evaluations of the degree and extent of inflammation in biopsy cores free of cancer and in cancerous biopsy cores were undertaken. Infiltrates were classified as periglandular if they were within 50 microns of a glandular structure. They were otherwise classified as stromal. Distribution of the inflammation was reported as focal, multifocal, or diffuse. The intensity of inflammation was separately graded as mild if there were fewer than 10 inflammatory cells per high-power field, moderate if there were 10-200 cells per high-power microscopic field, or severe if there were more than 200 cells per field. In all cases the great majority of inflammatory cells were mononuclear, predominantly lymphocytes. Periglandular inflammation was most common, with 18% of patients having focal periglandular and 20% having multifocal periglandular inflammation on their preimplant biopsies. Cancer-related infiltrates were the second most common, with 23% of patients having focal, 13% multifocal, and 13% diffuse cancer-related inflammation on their preimplant biopsies. Eight of the 55 patients developed postimplant urinary retention, requiring catheterization for 2 to 8 days. The overall incidence of postimplant urinary retention was low and there was no obvious relationship between the presence of inflammation on preimplant biopsy and the likelihood of postimplant urinary retention. AUA score changes at 1 and 6 months postimplant were highly variable and unrelated to the presence or severity of periglandular or cancer-related inflammation. Considering the apparent lack of relationship between histological findings and clinical outcomes in the patients reported here, the authors conclude that histologic evidence of prostatitis is not a contraindication to brachytherapy.
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