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1 Prostate MRI Update 2016: MR-TRUS Fusion Biopsy SCBT•MR 2016 Katarzyna J. Macura, MD, PhD, FACR, FSCBTMR The Russell H. Morgan Department of Radiology and Radiological Science, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD

Prostate MRI Update 2016

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Prostate MRI Update 2016: MR-TRUS Fusion Biopsy

SCBT•MR 2016

Katarzyna J. Macura, MD, PhD, FACR, FSCBTMR

The Russell H. Morgan Department of Radiology and Radiological Science,

Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD

Background

• 1 mln prostate biopsies are performed annually in the USA during the

PSA era

• Blind biopsies are misleading

– Underdetection of significant cancer (anterior prostate or apex)

– 35% falsely negative

– Overdetection of small indolent cancer of little clinical significance (up to 50% of

detected cancers)

• > 26,000 deaths projected in 2016

• MRI-ultrasound fusion for guidance of targeted prostate biopsy emerged

as an important tool for diagnosis of clinically significant prostate cancer,

while minimizing detection of indolent cancer

Prostate Cancer at a Glance

NCI - http://seer.cancer.gov/statfacts/html/prost.html

Lifetime Risk: 14.0% of men will be diagnosed with prostate cancer during their lifetime

Prevalence: In 2013, estimated 2,850,139 men living with prostate cancer in the US

Indications for MR-TRUS fusion biopsy

• Elevated PSA and suspected cancer, previous negative TRUS biopsy

• Known cancer considered for active surveillance

• Known cancer to determine disease status during active surveillance

• Candidates for focal therapy

59M, Gleason 3+4=7 (80% of 1 core), G3+3=6 tumor (2

cores, 50% each), and HGPIN

De-novo diagnosis of prostate cancer:

biopsy naïve patient

TRUS

Nodule 20 mm

PI-RADS 5

De-novo diagnosis of prostate cancer:

multiple negative TRUS biopsies

71M, Gleason 4+4=8 involving 2 cores (30%, 40%)

Nodule 10 mm

PI-RADS 4

Extruded BPH nodule or PZ nodule?

75M, benign prostatic tissue

Nodule 8 mm

circumscribed

PI-RADS 2-3

Cancer vs. Extruded BPH

Elevated PSA, negative prior TRUS x 2:

typically missed on TRUS anterior nodule

Nodule 16mm PI-RADS 5

65M, Gleason 3+3=6 involving 3 cores

(100%, 40%, 5%).

Patient in active surveillance:

establish the risk, monitor stability

F-U 2-years later

Nodule 10mm PI-RADS 4 75M, Gleason score 3+3=6 60% of core

Comparison standard vs. targeted BX

Systematic BX:

1) RIGHT APEX: BENIGN.

2) RIGHT MID: BENIGN.

3) RIGHT BASE: HGPIN.

4) LEFT APEX: BENIGN.

5) LEFT MID: BENIGN WITH

CHRONIC INFLAMMATION.

6) LEFT BASE: BENIGN WITH

CHRONIC INFLAMMATION.

Radical prostatectomy:

Adenocarcinoma (conventional, NOS)

GLEASON SCORE - DOMINANT

NODULE: 4 + 5 = 9

GLEASON SCORE - SECONDARY

NODULE: 3 + 3 = 6

LOCATION - DOMINANT NODULE:

Right; Posterolateral/Posterior;

Apex/Mid/Base

LOCATION - SECONDARY NODULE:

Left; Posterolateral; Mid

LOCAL EXTENT: Organ confined;

MARGINS: Negative

61M, PSA from 5.7 to 18 ng/mL over 8 years

negative prior TRUS biopsies x2

Nodule 16 mm, capsule bulge

PI-RADS 5

Targeted BX:

PROSTATE, Target 1 RIGHT BASE

MID: PROSTATIC

ADENOCARCINOMA,

GLEASON SCORE 4 + 3 = 7

INVOLVING 80% OF ONE (1) OF

TWO (2) CORES.

(70% GLEASON PATTERN 4) .

Comparison of MR/Ultrasound Fusion–Guided

Biopsy With Ultrasound-Guided Biopsy for the

Diagnosis of Prostate CancerJAMA. 2015;313(4):390-397

Targeted biopsy diagnosed 30% more high-risk cancers vs. standard biopsy

and 17% fewer low-risk cancers.

A Randomized Controlled Trial To Assess and Compare the

Outcomes of Two-core Prostate Biopsy Guided by Fused

Magnetic Resonance and Transrectal Ultrasound Images and

Traditional 12-core Systematic Biopsy

Clinically significant cancer two-core MRI/TRUS-TB 38% vs. 12-core RB in control 49%

Prospective Evaluation of the Prostate Imaging

Reporting and Data System Version 2 for Prostate

Cancer Detection

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THE JOURNAL OF UROLOGY, Vol.

196, 690-696, September 2016

Cancer detection rate:

PI-RADS 5 - 78%

PI-RADS 4 - 30%

PI-RADS 3 - 16%

PI-RADS 2 – 22%

Conclusion: The current criteria result in a high false-positive rate and stricter criteria

may be needed to increase the cancer detection rate for PI-RADS scores of 3, 4, and 5.

Correlation of PI-RADS score of regions of interest (ROIs) on mpMRI with

targeted biopsy (bx) findings (benign, Gleason score or GS 6, GS >7) in the

AS cohort (A), confirmatory biopsy cohort (B) and targeted biopsy cohort (C).

The Role of Multiparametric Magnetic Resonance Imaging/Ultrasound Fusion Biopsy in Active

Surveillance. Eur Urol. 2016

Augmenting MRI with clinical variables

Prostate Health Index

Tosoian JJ et al. JHU, in pressScatter plot of PHI by PI-RADS score and biopsy results (n=121)

No men with PHI<27 and PI-RADS≤3

had grade group ≥2 cancer.

Several men with low PI-RADS scores

and PHI>27 had clinically significant PCa.

Gleason Score

1 GS 3+3=6

2 GS 3+4=7

3 GS 4+3=7

4 GS 4+4=8

5 GS9 or GS10

Pathologic Grade Group:

AUA – SAR Consensus Statement

• “When high-quality prostate MRI is available, it should be strongly

considered in any patient with a prior negative biopsy who has persistent

clinical suspicion for prostate cancer and who is undergoing a repeat

biopsy.”

• “If MRI is done, it should be performed, interpreted, and reported in

accordance with PI-RADS V2 guidelines.“

• “Patients receiving a PI-RADS assessment category of 3-5 warrant

repeat biopsy with image guided targeting.”

• “At least two targeted cores should be obtained from each MRI-defined

target.”

AUA – SAR Consensus Statement

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THANK YOU! SCBT•MR 2016