Abstract

BackgroundMultiparametric magnetic resonance imaging (mpMRI)-targeted prostate biopsies can improve detection of clinically significant prostate cancer and decrease the overdetection of insignificant cancers. It is unknown whether visual-registration targeting is sufficient or augmentation with image-fusion software is needed. ObjectiveTo assess concordance between the two methods. Design, setting, and participantsWe conducted a blinded, within-person randomised, paired validating clinical trial. From 2014 to 2016, 141 men who had undergone a prior (positive or negative) transrectal ultrasound biopsy and had a discrete lesion on mpMRI (score 3–5) requiring targeted transperineal biopsy were enrolled at a UK academic hospital; 129 underwent both biopsy strategies and completed the study. InterventionThe order of performing biopsies using visual registration and a computer-assisted MRI/ultrasound image-fusion system (SmartTarget) on each patient was randomised. The equipment was reset between biopsy strategies to mitigate incorporation bias. Outcome measurements and statistical analysisThe proportion of clinically significant prostate cancer (primary outcome: Gleason pattern ≥3+4=7, maximum cancer core length ≥4mm; secondary outcome: Gleason pattern ≥4+3=7, maximum cancer core length ≥6mm) detected by each method was compared using McNemar's test of paired proportions. Results and limitationsThe two strategies combined detected 93 clinically significant prostate cancers (72% of the cohort). Each strategy detected 80/93 (86%) of these cancers; each strategy identified 13 cases missed by the other. Three patients experienced adverse events related to biopsy (urinary retention, urinary tract infection, nausea, and vomiting). No difference in urinary symptoms, erectile function, or quality of life between baseline and follow-up (median 10.5 wk) was observed. The key limitations were lack of parallel-group randomisation and a limit on the number of targeted cores. ConclusionsVisual-registration and image-fusion targeting strategies combined had the highest detection rate for clinically significant cancers. Targeted prostate biopsy should be performed using both strategies together. Patient summaryWe compared two prostate cancer biopsy strategies: visual registration and image fusion. A combination of the two strategies found the most clinically important cancers and should be used together whenever targeted biopsy is being performed.

Highlights

  • Current management strategies for prostate cancer (PC) depend heavily on appropriate risk stratification, for which adequate tumour sampling and localisation are pivotal

  • From 2014 to 2016, 141 men who had undergone a prior transrectal ultrasound biopsy and had a discrete lesion on multiparametric magnetic resonance imaging (mpMRI) requiring targeted transperineal biopsy were enrolled at a UK academic hospital; 129 underwent both biopsy strategies and completed the study

  • [5] MRI/ultrasound fusion system developed in our institution (SmartTarget; technical details included in the Supplementary material)

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Summary

Introduction

Current management strategies for prostate cancer (PC) depend heavily on appropriate risk stratification, for which adequate tumour sampling and localisation are pivotal. Development of multiparametric magnetic resonance imaging (mpMRI) has improved diagnostic sensitivity for clinically significant disease while reducing overdetection of clinically insignificant cancer [1,2,3]. Whether visual-registration targeting is sufficient or whether it needs augmentation with image-fusion software has been debated [4]. SmartTarget Biopsy trial (ClinicalTrials.gov NCT02341677) was conducted to compare visual registration with image fusion using a validated [5] MRI/ultrasound fusion system developed in our institution (SmartTarget; technical details included in the Supplementary material). Multiparametric magnetic resonance imaging (mpMRI)-targeted prostate biopsies can improve detection of clinically significant prostate cancer and decrease the overdetection of insignificant cancers. It is unknown whether visual-registration targeting is sufficient or augmentation with image-fusion software is needed. From 2014 to 2016, 141 men who had undergone a prior (positive or negative) transrectal ultrasound biopsy and had a discrete lesion on mpMRI (score 3–5) requiring targeted transperineal biopsy were enrolled at a UK academic hospital; 129 underwent both biopsy strategies and completed the study.

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