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Clinical Significance of Perineural Invasion in Men With Grade Group 1 Prostate Cancer on Active Surveillance

Claire M. de la Calle, Mufaddal M. Mamawala, Patricia Landis, Katarzyna J. Macura, Bruce J. Trock, Jonathan I. Epstein, Christian P. Pavlovich

2022The Journal of Urology15 citationsDOI

Abstract

PURPOSE: We aimed to evaluate the clinical significance of perineural invasion in men on active surveillance for Grade Group 1 prostate cancer. MATERIALS AND METHODS: We identified 1,969 men with Grade Group 1 prostate cancer and at least 1 follow-up biopsy. A time-dependent Cox model and a logistic regression model were used to assess the association between biopsy-detected perineural invasion and grade reclassification (defined as the detection of Grade Group ≥2 prostate cancer on a surveillance biopsy), and adverse pathology (defined as Grade Group ≥3 ± seminal vesicle invasion ± lymph node involvement) at radical prostatectomy, respectively. RESULTS: > .05). CONCLUSIONS: Perineural invasion during active surveillance was associated with grade reclassification. At radical prostatectomy biopsy-detected perineural invasion patients exhibited more extraprostatic extension but biopsy-detected perineural invasion was not independently associated with more adverse pathology. In addition, these patients did not have more biochemical recurrence during follow-up. Perineural invasion should not preclude Grade Group 1 patients from active surveillance but they may warrant more stringent monitoring.

Topics & Concepts

Perineural invasionProstatectomyMedicineProstate cancerBiopsyCancerProstateLymphovascular invasionInternal medicineUrologyMetastasisProstate Cancer Diagnosis and TreatmentProstate Cancer Treatment and ResearchUrinary Bladder and Prostate Research
Clinical Significance of Perineural Invasion in Men With Grade Group 1 Prostate Cancer on Active Surveillance | Litcius