18 research outputs found

    Differentiation of prostate cancer lesions with high and with low Gleason score by diffusion-weighted MRI.

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    OBJECTIVES To differentiate prostate cancer lesions with high and with low Gleason score by diffusion-weighted-MRI (DW-MRI). METHODS This prospective study was approved by the responsible ethics committee. DW-MRI of 84 consenting prostate and/or bladder cancer patients scheduled for radical prostatectomy were acquired and used to compute apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC), intravoxel incoherent motion (IVIM: the pure diffusion coefficient D t, the pseudo-diffusion fraction F p and the pseudo-diffusion coefficient D p), and high b value (as acquired and Hessian filtered) parameters within the index lesion. These parameters (separately and combined in a logistic regression model) were used to differentiate lesions depending on whether whole-prostate histopathological analysis after prostatectomy determined a high (≥7) or low (6) Gleason score. RESULTS Mean ADC and D t differed significantly (p of independent two-sample t test < 0.01) between high- and low-grade lesions. The highest classification accuracy was achieved by the mean ADC (AUC 0.74) and D t (AUC 0.70). A logistic regression model based on mean ADC, mean F p and mean high b value image led to an AUC of 0.74 following leave-one-out cross-validation. CONCLUSIONS Classification by IVIM parameters was not superior to classification by ADC. DW-MRI parameters correlated with Gleason score but did not provide sufficient information to classify individual patients. KEY POINTS • Mean ADC and diffusion coefficient differ between high- and low-grade prostatic lesions. • Accuracy of trivariate logistic regression is not superior to using ADC alone. • DW-MRI is not a valid substitute for biopsies in clinical routine yet

    Focal HIFU therapy for anterior compared to posterior prostate cancer lesions.

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    OBJECTIVE To compare cancer control in anterior compared to posterior prostate cancer lesions treated with a focal HIFU therapy approach. MATERIALS AND METHODS In a prospectively maintained national database, 598 patients underwent focal HIFU (Sonablate®500) (March/2007-November/2016). Follow-up occurred with 3-monthly clinic visits and PSA testing in the first year with PSA, every 6-12 months with mpMRI with biopsy for MRI-suspicion of recurrence. Treatment failure was any secondary treatment (ADT/chemotherapy, cryotherapy, EBRT, RRP, or re-HIFU), tumour recurrence with Gleason ≥ 3 + 4 on prostate biopsy without further treatment or metastases/prostate cancer-related mortality. Cases with anterior cancer were compared to those with posterior disease. RESULTS 267 patients were analysed following eligibility criteria. 45 had an anterior focal-HIFU and 222 had a posterior focal-HIFU. Median age was 64 years and 66 years, respectively, with similar PSA level of 7.5 ng/ml and 6.92 ng/ml. 84% and 82%, respectively, had Gleason 3 + 4, 16% in both groups had Gleason 4 + 3, 0% and 2% had Gleason 4 + 4. Prostate volume was similar (33 ml vs. 36 ml, p = 0.315); median number of positive cores in biopsies was different in anterior and posterior tumours (7 vs. 5, p = 0.009), while medium cancer core length, and maximal cancer percentage of core were comparable. 17/45 (37.8%) anterior focal-HIFU patients compared to 45/222 (20.3%) posterior focal-HIFU patients required further treatment (p = 0.019). CONCLUSION Treating anterior prostate cancer lesions with focal HIFU may be less effective compared to posterior tumours

    MRI-targeted or standard biopsy for prostate-cancer diagnosis

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    Background Multiparametric magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), with or without targeted biopsy, is an alternative to standard transrectal ultrasonography-guided biopsy for prostate-cancer detection in men with a raised prostate-specific antigen level who have not undergone biopsy. However, comparative evidence is limited. Methods In a multicenter, randomized, noninferiority trial, we assigned men with a clinical suspicion of prostate cancer who had not undergone biopsy previously to undergo MRI, with or without targeted biopsy, or standard transrectal ultrasonography-guided biopsy. Men in the MRI-targeted biopsy group underwent a targeted biopsy (without standard biopsy cores) if the MRI was suggestive of prostate cancer; men whose MRI results were not suggestive of prostate cancer were not offered biopsy. Standard biopsy was a 10-to-12-core, transrectal ultrasonography-guided biopsy. The primary outcome was the proportion of men who received a diagnosis of clinically significant cancer. Secondary outcomes included the proportion of men who received a diagnosis of clinically insignificant cancer. Results A total of 500 men underwent randomization. In the MRI-targeted biopsy group, 71 of 252 men (28%) had MRI results that were not suggestive of prostate cancer, so they did not undergo biopsy. Clinically significant cancer was detected in 95 men (38%) in the MRI-targeted biopsy group, as compared with 64 of 248 (26%) in the standard-biopsy group (adjusted difference, 12 percentage points; 95% confidence interval [CI], 4 to 20; P=0.005). MRI, with or without targeted biopsy, was noninferior to standard biopsy, and the 95% confidence interval indicated the superiority of this strategy over standard biopsy. Fewer men in the MRI-targeted biopsy group than in the standard-biopsy group received a diagnosis of clinically insignificant cancer (adjusted difference, -13 percentage points; 95% CI, -19 to -7; P&lt;0.001). Conclusions The use of risk assessment with MRI before biopsy and MRI-targeted biopsy was superior to standard transrectal ultrasonography-guided biopsy in men at clinical risk for prostate cancer who had not undergone biopsy previously. (Funded by the National Institute for Health Research and the European Association of Urology Research Foundation; PRECISION ClinicalTrials.gov number, NCT02380027 .)

    Harnableitung beim älteren Patienten

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    BACKGROUND Bladder cancer represents one of the ten most prevalent cancers worldwide. More than 400,000 people worldwide are newly diagnosed every year. Within 2 years after diagnosis, 80 % of patients with muscle invasive bladder cancer without treatment die. METHODS The aggressive local surgical approach with a cystectomy is the therapy of choice. The median age of patients with de novo bladder cancer is 70 years. Thus bladder cancer is a cancer of the elderly. For demographical reasons, the number of eldery patients undergoing radical cystectomy will rise in the next few years. The type of urinary diversion is a major factor influencing perioperative morbidity and quality of life in these patients. Incontinent urinary diversions are preferentially used in daily practice. CONCLUSIONS There are only a few contraindications for orthotopic neobladder; however, age alone is not a contraindication. Patient selection and a nerve sparing approach are crucial in men and women to achieve excellent functional results with orthotopic neobladder in elderly patients.Hintergrund Das Blasenkarzinom ist eine der 10 häufigsten Krebserkrankungen mit weltweit über 400.000 Neuerkrankungen/Jahr. Patienten mit muskelinvasiven Blasentumoren sterben ohne Behandlung in 80 % der Fälle innerhalb von 2 Jahren. Methode Die Zystektomie stellt die Therapie der Wahl dar. Das mediane Alter der neu diagnostizierten Patienten liegt bei 70 Jahren und somit sind eher ältere Patienten davon betroffen. Demographisch bedingt wird die Anzahl Zystektomien von älteren Patienten in den nächsten Jahren zunehmen. Die Wahl der Harnableitung stellt bezüglich perioperativer Morbidität und nachfolgender Lebensqualität einen entscheidenden Faktor dar. Am häufigsten werden bei älteren Patienten inkontinente Harnableitungen angelegt. Schlussfolgerung Das Alter allein stellt keine Kontraindikation für die orthotope ileale Ersatzblase oder einen katheterisierbaren Pouch dar. Der Patientenselektion und einer nervenschonenden Operationstechnik kommt beim älteren Patienten beiderlei Geschlechts eine entscheidende Bedeutung zu, um exzellenten funktionelle Ergebnissen zu erzielen

    What is the Need for Prostatic Biomarkers in Prostate Cancer Management?

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    Discriminating patients with a low risk of progression from those with lethal prostate cancer is one of the main challenges in prostate cancer management. Indeed, such discrimination is essential if we aim to avoid overtreatment in men with indolent disease and to improve survival in those men with lethal disease. We are reporting on the current literature on such prognostic tools that are now available, their clinical role and their limitations in individualizing care. There is an urgent need to incorporate such genomic tools into new platform-based clinical trial structures to further develop and validate prognostic and predictive biomarkers and provide prostate cancer patients with an effective and cost-efficient access to new drugs in the setting of personalized treatment

    Repeat prostate biopsies prior to radical prostatectomy do not impact erectile function recovery and mid- to long-term continence.

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    BACKGROUND A growing number of men undergo repeat biopsies prior to radical prostatectomy for prostate cancer. However, the long-term impact of repeat biopsies on functional outcomes in this patient population remains unelucidated. Thus, we compared functional outcomes between patients who underwent single biopsy versus repeat biopsies before radical prostatectomy. METHODS From 1996 to 2015, 1015 consecutive patients underwent radical prostatectomy, and subsequently had urinary continence and erectile function assessed for >2 years follow-up. One-fourth of patients (275; 27%) had ≥2 biopsies before prostatectomy. Logistic regression models tested whether repeat biopsy before prostatectomy predicted continence or erectile function recovery. RESULTS For the overall cohort, continence rates were 84%, 92%, 96%, and 98% at 3, 6, 12, and 24 months, respectively. Repeat biopsy before prostatectomy was associated with lower continence rate at 3 months compared to single biopsy (P = 0.03); however, no significant differences were observed at 6, 12, or 24 months. In multivariable analyses adjusting for age, body mass index and diabetes/cardiovascular disease/smoking, the association between repeat biopsy and lower likelihood of continence at 3 months remained (odds ratio 0.67, 95% confidence interval 0.47-0.97; P = 0.03). Overall erectile function recovery rates were 16%, 33%, 51%, and 55% at 3, 6, 12, and 24 months, respectively. No difference in erectile function recovery rates was seen at any time point for single biopsy versus repeat biopsy. In multivariable analyses, repeat biopsy was not predictive of erectile function recovery at any time point. CONCLUSIONS Repeat biopsy before radical prostatectomy impairs early continence after surgery. However, erectile function recovery and mid-term to long-term continence are not affected. These data support the current trend towards active surveillance and delayed local treatment in patients with low- to intermediate-risk prostate cancer

    Dynamic patterns of [68Ga]Ga-PSMA-11 uptake in recurrent prostate cancer lesions.

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    PURPOSE Dual-time point PET/CT scanning with [68Ga]Ga-PSMA-11 in the diagnosis of prostate cancer (PC) has been advanced as a method to increase detection of PC lesions, particularly at early stages of biochemical recurrence and as a potential means to aid the discrimination between benign and pathological prostate-specific membrane antigen (PSMA) uptake. However, the assumption that all PC lesions uniformly exhibit increasing tracer uptake at delayed imaging has not yet been investigated, which this present study aims to address. METHODS One hundred consecutive patients with biochemically recurrent PC who received standard and late [68Ga]Ga-PSMA-11 PET/CT (by local protocol at 1.5 h "standard" and 2.5 h p.i. "late") underwent retrospective evaluation. All lesions with a tracer uptake above local background were analysed with regard to their maximum standardised uptake values at standard and late images (SUVmax) and characterised according to their morphological characteristics. RESULTS Seventy-nine of 100 patients had PSMA-positive scans, in whom a total of 185 individual PSMA-positive lesions were identified. These were morphologically characterised as bone lesions (n = 48), solid organ lesions (n = 3), lymph node (LN) lesions (n = 78) and locally recurrent lesions in the prostatic fossa or seminal vesicles (n = 56). The relative uptake between standard and late imaging was considered; all lesions classified as local recurrence presented with increasing (86%) or stable patterns of tracer uptake (14%). In contrast, only 58% of bone lesions exhibited increasing tracer uptake, with 21% exhibiting a stable pattern and 21% exhibiting a decreasing tracer uptake at late imaging. CONCLUSION A heterogeneous pattern of dynamic tracer uptake was observed, with a largely increasing pattern observed for locally recurrent lesions and lymph nodes and a significant proportion of bone lesions exhibiting decreasing tracer uptake. The results are of significance not only in the imaging and identification of PC lesions, but they also have implications for PSMA-directed ligand therapy

    Seminal Vesical Sparing Cystectomy in Bladder Cancer Patients is Feasible with Good Functional Results without Impairing Oncological Outcomes: A Longitudinal Long-Term Propensity-Matched Single Center Study.

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    PURPOSE Seminal-vesicle-sparing radical-cystectomy has been reported to improve short-term functional-results without compromising oncological outcomes. However, there is still a lack of data on long-term outcomes after seminal-vesicle-sparing radical-cystectomy. The aim of this study was to compare oncological and functional outcomes in patients after seminal-vesicle-sparing vs nonseminal-vesicle-sparing radical-cystectomy. MATERIAL AND METHODS Oncological and functional outcomes of 470 consecutive patients after radical-cystectomy and orthotopic ileal reservoir from 2000 to 2017 were evaluated. They were stratified into 6 groups according to nerve-sparing and seminal-vesicle-sparing status as attempted during surgery: no-sparing at all (n=55), unilateral-nerve-sparing (n=159), bilateral-nerve-sparing (n=132), unilateral-seminal-vesicle-sparing and unilateral-nerve-sparing (n=30), unilateral-seminal-vesicle-sparing and bilateral-nerve-sparing (n=45), and bilateral seminal-vesicle-sparing (n=49) and used propensity modelling to adjust for preoperative differences. RESULTS Median follow-up among the entire cohort was 64months. Among the 6 groups, our analysis showed no difference in local recurrence-free survival (p=0.173). However, progression free, cancer-specific and overall survival were more favourable in patients with seminal-vesicle-sparing radical-cystectomy (p <0.001, p=0.006 and p <0.001, respectively). Proportions of patients with erectile function recovery were higher in the seminal-vesicle-sparing groups at all time points in all analyses, respectively, with pronounced earlier recovery in patients with bilateral-SVS. Importantly, patients with seminal-vesicle-sparing were significantly less in need of erectile aids to achieve erection and intercourse. Over the whole period, daytime urinary-continence was significantly better in the seminal-vesicle-sparing groups (OR 2.64 to 5.21). CONCLUSIONS In a highly selected group of patients, seminal-vesicle-sparing radical-cystectomy is oncologically safe and results in excellent functional outcomes that are reached at an earlier timepoint after surgery and remain superior over a longer period of time

    The role of additional late PSMA-ligand PET/CT in the differentiation between lymph node metastases and ganglia.

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    PURPOSE Differentiating between prostate cancer (PC) lesions and benign structures which exhibit radiotracer uptake in PSMA-ligand PET/CT can be challenging. Additional late imaging has been shown to be a powerful method for the discrimination between PC and non-PC lesions, owing to the increasing tracer uptake of the former. Nevertheless, there are no pre-existing studies which describe the dynamic tracer uptake for ganglia, which this present study aims to address. METHODS Fifty consecutive patients with PC who received standard and late 68Ga-PSMA-11-PET/CT (by local protocol at 1.5 h "standard" and 2.5 h p.i. "late") underwent retrospective evaluation. All lesions with a tracer uptake above local background indicative for ganglia as well as PC lesions were analysed with regard to their maximum standardised uptake values (SUVmax) and localisation. RESULTS Overall, 86 PSMA-positive ganglia were identified in 70% (n = 35) of the patients. Five ganglia exhibited PSMA avidity at late imaging only, and three at standard imaging only. A total of 66 lesions suggestive for PC were detected in 44 patients (88%), of which 45% (n = 30) were morphologically identified as lymph nodes (LN), the remainder being locally recurrent lesions or bone metastases. No solid organ metastases were present in our cohort. At late scanning, 73% of the LN exhibited an increase in SUVmax, whereas 65% of the ganglia exhibited a decreasing or stable SUVmax. CONCLUSION Whereas the presence of increasing tracer uptake in potential PC lesions can provide additional data about the likelihood of malignancy, increasing SUVmax alone does not reliably differentiate between ganglia and PC lesions and is a potential diagnostic pitfall. We therefore recommend high-resolution CT to enable morphological characterisation of ganglia
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