Comparative Effectiveness of Techniques in Targeted Prostate Biopsy
Abstract
:Simple Summary
Abstract
1. Introduction
2. Systematic Versus Targeted Biopsy
3. Systematic Versus Targeted Biopsy in the Biopsy-Naïve Setting
4. Systematic Versus Targeted Biopsy Using the Transperineal Approach
5. Cognitive Fusion Versus Software-Guided Fusion-Targeted Biopsy
6. In-Bore Versus Cognitive Fusion Versus Software-Guided Fusion-Targeted Biopsy
7. Alternative mpMRI Protocols
8. Conclusions
Author Year | Study Design | Patient Population | Definition of csPCa | Comparison | Endpoint | Outcomes | Limitations |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Systematic versus Targeted Biopsy | |||||||
Kasivisvanathan et al. (PRECISION) [3] 2018 | Prospective, multicenter, randomized controlled, noninferiority trial | 500 patients, biopsy-naïve | GG ≥ 2 | MRI pathway (TB without SB if the MRI was suggestive of PCa, no Bx if the MRI was not suggestive of PCa) vs. 10–12 SB | Proportion of men who received a diagnosis of clinically significant cancer | csPCa CDR for MRI pathway vs. SB were 38% vs. 26% (p = 0.005). MRI pathway showed both noninferiority and superiority. ciPCa CDR for MRI pathway (9%) was significantly lower than SB (22%) (p < 0.001) | Moderate agreement (78%) among the sites and the radiologists reporting. MRI invisible csPCa can be missed on MRI pathway group |
Ahdoot et al. [4] (Trio) 2020 | Large, single-center, prospective, clinical trial | 2103 patients with elevated PSA or abnormal DRE and MRI suspicious lesion for PCa | GG ≥ 3 | FUS-TB vs. SB vs. TB + SB | Cancer detection according to GG | CDR on FUS-TB was significantly lower for GG 1 PCa and higher for GG ≥ 3 PCa. CDRs for GG ≥ 2 PCa were 31% with SB and 37.8% with TB. TB alone missed GG ≥ 2 PCa in 5.8% of patients and GG ≥ 3 in 1.9% of patients. Rates of upgrading on prostatectomy specimens were significantly higher for SB 41.6% (16.8% upgrading to GG ≥ 3) compared to TB 30.9% (8.7% upgrading to GG ≥ 3) | FUS-TB performed before SB may have affected the performance of SB. A single-center study may lead to limited generalizability |
Filson et al. [7] 2016 | Large, single-center, prospective, clinical trial | 1042 patients with elevated PSA or abnormal digital rectal examination or considering confirmation biopsy for active surveillance | GG ≥ 2 | FUS-TB vs. SB vs. TB + SB | csPCa detection | csPCa CDRs of TB alone vs. SB alone vs. TB + SB were 28% vs. 24% vs. 35%, respectively. TB + SB detected a significantly higher proportion of csPCa compared to both SB and TB alone (p < 0.001 for both). | The MRI scoring system in this study was institution-specific, although the protocol was similar to PIRADS |
Systematic versus Targeted Biopsy in the Biopsy-Naïve Setting | |||||||
Pokorny et al. [9] 2014 | Single-center, prospective study | 223 patients, biopsy-naïve | None | SB vs. TB vs. SB + TB | PCa detection | Overall CDR for SB was 56.5%, with 62.7% intermediate/high risk PCa (high volume GG2 or GG ≥ 3), compared to CDR 69.7% with 93.9% intermediate/high risk PCa for TB. In combined SB + TB, CDR was 64%, of which 76% were intermediate/high risk PCa. | Lack of oncologic follow-up data. Combination of TB and SB (TB first) can affect SB CDR |
Van der Leest et al. [10] (4M) 2019 | Multicenter, prospective study | 626 patients, biopsy-naïve | GG ≥ 2 | IB-TB vs. SB MRI pathway (patients with PIRADS ≥ 3 lesions underwent IB-TB followed by SB) vs. TRUSGB pathway (MRI-negative patients underwent SB alone) | The overall detection rates of csPCa and ciPCa for both pathways | IB-TB detected csPCa in 50% of patients with PIRADS ≥ 3 lesions, while combination IB-TB and SB detected csPCa in 57%. Overall, the TRUSGB pathway identified csPCa in 23%, compared to 25% in the MRI pathway. IB-TB alone underdetected 9% of csCPa vs. 2% in the combined approach. The sensitivity of the combined approach vs. SB was not significantly different in the detection of csPCa. | Combination of TB and SB (TB first) can affect SB CDR |
Rouviere et al. [11] (MRI-FIRST) 2019 | Multicenter, prospective, paired diagnostic study | 224 patients, biopsy-naïve | GG ≥ 2 (csPCa-A), GG 1 with MCCL ≥ 6 mm or GG ≥ 2 (csPCa-B), GG ≥ 3 (csPCa-C) | TB (COG-TB or FUS-TB) vs. SB | Detection of csPCa-A | GG ≥ 2 PCa was diagnosed in 32.3% of TB alone, 29.9% of SB alone, and 37.5% of combined PBx. SB and TB CDRs of GG ≥ 2 PCa were not significantly different. TB detected a significantly higher rate of GG ≥ 3 PCa (19.9% vs. 15.1%, p = 0.0095). SB detected a significantly higher proportion of ciPCa (20% vs. 5.8%, p < 0.0001). SB alone would miss 7.6% of csPCa, while mpMRI would miss 5.2%. | Combination of TB and SB (TB first) can affect SB CDR |
Klotz et al. (12) 2021 | Prospective, multicenter, randomized control, noninferiority trial | 453 patients, biopsy-naïve | GG ≥ 2 | MRI pathway with 4 cores per lesion vs. 12 core SB | Proportion of men with csPCa diagnosed in each arm | csPCa CDR for SB group vs. MRI pathway group were 30% vs. 35% (absolute difference, 5%, 97.5% 1-sided CI, −3.4% to ∞; noninferiority margin, −5%). The superiority test deemed not significant (p = 0.54). ciPCa CDR were significantly lower in the MRI pathway arm (10.1% vs. 21.7%; absolute difference, 11.6%; 95% CI, −18.2% to −4.9%; p < 0.001). | MRI invisible csPCa can be missed on MRI pathway group |
Systematic versus Targeted Biopsy Using the Transperineal Approach | |||||||
Pepe et al. [18] 2017 | Prospective study | 150 patients with PBx history (repeat PBx) | GG ≥ 2 and/or more than 2 positive core | TP vs. TR FUS-TB | Detection rate for csPCa with TP vs. TR FUS-TB | The detection rate for csPCa using TP FUS-TB was higher than TR (89.1% vs. 78.1%). The CDR in the anterior zone for TP approach was higher than TR approach (86.7% vs. 46.7%; p = 0.0001). | Sequential TP, TR FUS-TB, and saturation PBx can affect accuracy of biopsy |
Winoker et al. [20] 2020 | Prospective study | 379 patients at risk of PCa and with an MRI visible lesion | GG ≥ 2 | TP vs. TR FUS-TB | PCa detection of men with MRI visible lesions | The CDR of csPCa by TP and TR FUS-TB were 59% and 54% (p = 0.3), respectively. On multivariate analysis, there was no significant difference in detection of any PCa (OR 0.98, 95% CI 0.56–1.71; p = 0.940) or csPCa (OR 0.94, 95% CI 0.58–1.51; p = 0.791). There were no serious (Clavien ≥ 3) complications following PBx in both approach method. | Nonrandomized selection may lead to bias |
Borkowetz et al. [21] 2018 | Prospective, multicenter trial | 214 patients, biopsy-naïve | GG ≥ 2 | TP FUS-TB vs. TR SB | Proportion of patients diagnosed with significant PCa | csPCa CDRs were not significantly different between TP FUS-TB (38%) and TR SB (35%). CDR for combined SB + TB (44%) were significantly higher than both modalities alone (p < 0.005 for both). | Same operator performed TB and SB without being blinded to the cancer suspicious lesion on mpMRI, which may have impacted the performance of SB. Unlike other studies, FUS-TB was performed for PIRADS ≥ 2 lesions |
Exterkate et al. [22] (FUTURE) 2020 | Prospective, multicenter, randomized controled trial | 152 patients with PIRADS ≥ 3 and prior negative SB. They underwent TP FUS-TB or TR COG-TB in combination with SB | GG ≥ 2 | TB vs. SB | Detection difference between TB and repeated SB (secondary endpoint) | csPCa CDR for TB vs. SB were 32% vs. 16% (p < 0.001). Compared with TB alone, combination of TB and SB resulted in CDR differences of 1.0%, 5.0%, and 6.0% for csPCa, ciPCa, and any PCa, respectively. There was no significant difference between biopsy approach (TP vs. TR). | This trial was designed to compare CDRs of three TB techniques; therefore, sample size calculations for subgroup analyses are lacking. Same operator performed TB and SB without being blinded to the cancer suspicious lesion on mpMRI |
Cognitive Fusion versus Software-Guided Fusion Targeted Biopsy | |||||||
Delongchamps et al. [23] 2013 | Prospective study | 391 patients, biopsy-naïve | GG ≥ 2 | COG-TB vs. rigid FUS-TB vs. elastic FUS-TB | The accuracy of COG-TB vs. rigid FUS-TB vs. elastic FUS-TB | The overall CDR was 42%, 59%, and 62% with COG-TB, rigid FUS-TB, and elastic FUS-TB, respectively. The CDRs were significantly higher with both FUS-TB methods than with SB, while COG-TB did not outperform SB. | Internal scoring system for MRI. Study was not randomized |
Puech et al. [24] 2013 | Prospective, multicenter study | 95 patients with PCa suspicious lesion on MRI | Any ≥ 3 mm core cancer length or any GG ≥ 2 for SB or any cancer length for TB | SB vs. COG-TB vs. FUS-TB | Core cancer length | Overall CDR was 59% for SB and 69% for TB. csPCa CDR was in 52% of SB compared to 67% of TB. There was no significant difference in CDR between COG-TB and FUS-TB. | Internal scoring system for MRI. Sequential SB and TB can affect TB performance |
Wysock et al. [1] (PROFUS) 2014 | Prospective study | 125 patients with PCa suspicious lesion on MRI | >5 mm total cancer length and/or any GG ≥ 2 | FUS-TB vs. COG-TB vs. SB | Pooled TB (FUS-TB + COG-TB) and SB had equivalent rates of GG ≥ 2 PCa (both 32.8%), while SB detected a significantly higher proportion of GG1 disease (p = 0.0044). Overall CDR for FUS-TB and COG-TB was 32.0% and 26.7%, respectively (p = 0.1374). Detection of GG ≥ 2 PCa was higher on FUS-TB (20.3%) compared to COG-TB (15.1%), (p = 0.0523). A multivariate analysis demonstrated that the diameter of the suspicious lesion was significantly associated with CDR on FUS-TB. Smaller prostates and higher suspicion scores were associated with increased CDR on all TB (FUS-TB + COG-TB). | This study was not powered to compare several TB methods and SB. Sequential TB and SB can affect SB performance | |
Elkhoury et al. [30] (PAIREDCAP) 2019 | Prospective, single-center, paired cohort trial | 300 patients, biopsy-naïve | GG ≥ 2 | SB vs. COG-TB vs. FUS-TB | Detection of clinically significant cancer | The overall csPCa detection rate in men with PIRADS ≥ 3 lesion for all methods’ combination was 70.2%. CDR on a per-core basis for csPCa was 16% for SB, 33% for COG-TB, and 38% for FUS-TB. The combination of COG-TB and FUS-TB missed 20.9% of patients with any PCa detected by SB, while 9.7% of men had any PCa detected by TB and missed on SB. In comparing concordance of COG-TB vs. FUS-TB, csPCa was exclusively detected by FUS-TB in 24.7% of patients, and by COG-TB in 13.0% of patients, as well as by both COG-TB and FUS-TB in 64.2% of patients. | Single-center study; single operator |
In-Bore versus Cognitive Fusion versus Software-Guided Fusion Targeted Biopsy | |||||||
Arsov et al. [35] 2015 | Prospective, single-center, randomized controlled trial | 210 patients with at least one negative TRUS-guided biopsy and persistent PSA levels ≥ 4 ng/mL | GG ≥ 2 | IB-TB alone vs. FUS-TB + SB | Overall PCa detection rate | The PCa CDR was 37% in the IB-TB arm and 39% in the FUS-TB and SB arm (p = 0.7). There were no statistically significant differences in csPCa CDR between the two arms (29% vs. 32%, p = 0.7) | Single-center study. Only one type of fusion biopsy device. Combination of TB and SB (TB first) can affect SB CDR. The primary endpoint was not csPCa detection but an overall PCa detection. The endpoint was not met after interim analysis |
Wegelin et al. [36] (FUTURE) 2019 | Prospective, multicenter, randomized controlled trial | 665 patients with prior negative SB | GG ≥ 2 | FUS-TB vs. COG-TB vs. IB-TB (234 patients with PIRADS ≥ 3 were randomized to TP FUS-TB, TR COG-TB, and TR IB-TB) | Overall PCa detection | No statistically significant differences were observed in overall (49% vs. 44% vs. 55%, p = 0.4) or csPCa (34% vs. 33% vs. 33%, p > 0.9) CDR between the three methods | Underpowering for primary outcome (overall PCa detection) due to a low rate of PIRADS ≥ 3 lesions on mpMRI |
Accuracy of MRI Predicting Prostate Cancer | |||||||
Ahmed et al. (PROMIS) [43] 2017 | Multicenter, paired-cohort confirmatory study | 576 patients, biopsy-naïve | GG ≥ 3 more, or MCCL ≥ 6 mm | mpMRI and 10–12 core SB vs. template mapping biopsy | Proportion of men who could safely avoid biopsy and proportion of men who had csPCa and were correctly identified by mpMRI | csPCa CDR was more sensitive with mpMRI than SB (93% vs. 48%, p < 0.0001) and less specific (41% vs. 96%, p < 0.0001) | Patients with prostate size > 100 mL were excluded due to template grid size and pubic arch interference. Template biopsy followed by SB may have decreased accuracy due to prostate swelling or deformation |
Simmons et al. (PICTURE) [44] 2017 | Single-center, paired- cohort study | 249 men with prior biopsy | GG ≥ 3 more and/or cancer core length ≥ 6 mm | mpMRI with template mapping biopsy as reference test | Number of men who could avoid repeat PBx by mpMRI for csPCa | The accuracy assessed by AUROC/sensitivity/specificity of mpMRI with Likert score ≥ 3 cutoff were 0.74%/97.1%/21.9%. A total of 35/249 of men with scores < 3 could potentially avoid biopsy, with 32/35 patients with ciPCa or benign disease, and 3/35 patients with csPCa that would be missed | Low proportion of patients with Likert score 1 or 2 (14%) may lead to low specificity. The study was conducted before PIRADS era |
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Sugano, D.; Kaneko, M.; Yip, W.; Lebastchi, A.H.; Cacciamani, G.E.; Abreu, A.L. Comparative Effectiveness of Techniques in Targeted Prostate Biopsy. Cancers 2021, 13, 1449. https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers13061449
Sugano D, Kaneko M, Yip W, Lebastchi AH, Cacciamani GE, Abreu AL. Comparative Effectiveness of Techniques in Targeted Prostate Biopsy. Cancers. 2021; 13(6):1449. https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers13061449
Chicago/Turabian StyleSugano, Dordaneh, Masatomo Kaneko, Wesley Yip, Amir H. Lebastchi, Giovanni E. Cacciamani, and Andre Luis Abreu. 2021. "Comparative Effectiveness of Techniques in Targeted Prostate Biopsy" Cancers 13, no. 6: 1449. https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers13061449
APA StyleSugano, D., Kaneko, M., Yip, W., Lebastchi, A. H., Cacciamani, G. E., & Abreu, A. L. (2021). Comparative Effectiveness of Techniques in Targeted Prostate Biopsy. Cancers, 13(6), 1449. https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers13061449