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Final Analysis of the Magnetic Resonance Imaging in Active Surveillance Trial

Paul Doan, Matthijs J. Scheltema, Amer Amin, Ron Shnier, Bart Geboers, William Gondoputro, D. Moses, Pim J. van Leeuwen, Anne Maree Haynes, Jayne Matthews, Phillip Brenner, Gordon O’Neill, Carlo Yuen, Warick Delprado, Phillip D. Stricker, James Thompson

2022The Journal of Urology12 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

PURPOSE: This study aimed to assess the medium-term oncologic outcomes of an active surveillance protocol, replacing confirmatory biopsy with serial multiparametric magnetic resonance imaging. MATERIALS AND METHODS: A total of 172 men were enrolled in this single-arm prospective trial. Men with prostate cancer (Gleason 3+3=6 or Gleason 3+4=7 with ≤10% Gleason pattern 4 overall and <2 cores Gleason pattern 4) eligible for surveillance were included in the study. Men underwent baseline multiparametric magnetic resonance imaging and template ± targeted biopsy, then multiparametric magnetic resonance imaging at years 1 and 2 with a 3-year end-of-protocol biopsy. Biopsies during the 3-year protocol period were triggered by abnormalities on multiparametric magnetic resonance imaging and/or increases in prostate specific antigen density (>0.2 ng/ml/cc). RESULTS: = .001). Only 2.3% (4/172) of patients had false-negative multiparametric magnetic resonance imaging and high-risk pathological features (pT3 or high-volume International Society of Urological Pathology >2). After a median 69 months (Q1-Q3 56-79) follow-up of all patients in the cohort, freedom from biochemical recurrence, metastasis, and prostate cancer-related death were 99.3%, 100%, and 100%, respectively. CONCLUSIONS: Final analysis of the Magnetic Resonance Imaging in Active Surveillance trial indicates that there is minimal risk to omitting 1-year confirmatory biopsy during active surveillance if baseline magnetic resonance-targeted + saturation template biopsy was performed; however, standardized 3-year systematic biopsy should be performed due to occasional magnetic resonance imaging-invisible tumors.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineMagnetic resonance imagingProstate cancerProstate-specific antigenBiopsyProstateProstate biopsyUrologyRadiologyNuclear medicineCancerInternal medicineProstate Cancer Diagnosis and TreatmentProstate Cancer Treatment and ResearchMRI in cancer diagnosis
Final Analysis of the Magnetic Resonance Imaging in Active Surveillance Trial | Litcius