6533b82afe1ef96bd128c322

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Prospective Evaluation of PI-RADS™ Version 2 Using the International Society of Urological Pathology Prostate Cancer Grade Group System

Baris TurkbeySherif MehralivandSherif MehralivandBradford J. WoodMaria J. MerinoPeter L. ChoykeSonia GaurFrancesca MertanJoanna H. ShihSandra BednarovaPeter A. Pinto

subject

Image-Guided BiopsyMalemedicine.medical_specialtyPathologyUrology030232 urology & nephrology030218 nuclear medicine & medical imaging03 medical and health sciencesProstate cancer0302 clinical medicinePredictive Value of TestsProstateBiopsymedicineMedical imagingHumansProspective StudiesMultiparametric Magnetic Resonance ImagingAgedUltrasonographymedicine.diagnostic_testbusiness.industryProstatic NeoplasmsMagnetic resonance imagingMiddle Agedmedicine.diseaseMagnetic Resonance ImagingPI-RADSProstate-specific antigenmedicine.anatomical_structureRadiologyNeoplasm Gradingbusiness

description

The PI-RADS™ (Prostate Imaging Reporting and Data System), version 2 scoring system, introduced in 2015, is based on expert consensus. In the same time frame ISUP (International Society of Urological Pathology) introduced a new pathological scoring system for prostate cancer. Our goal was to prospectively evaluate the cancer detection rates for each PI-RADS, version 2 category and compare them to ISUP group scores in patients undergoing systematic biopsy and magnetic resonance imaging-transrectal ultrasound fusion guided biopsy.A total of 339 treatment naïve patients prospectively underwent multiparametric magnetic resonance imaging evaluated with PI-RADS, version 2 with subsequent systematic and fusion guided biopsy from May 2015 to May 2016. ISUP scores were applied to pathological specimens. An ISUP score of 2 or greater (ie Gleason 3 + 4 or greater) was defined as clinically significant prostate cancer. Cancer detection rates were determined for each PI-RADS, version 2 category as well as for the T2 weighted PI-RADS, version 2 categories in the peripheral zone.The cancer detection rate for PI-RADS, version 2 categories 1, 2, 3, 4 and 5 was 25%, 20.2%, 24.8%, 39.1% and 86.9% for all prostate cancer, and 0%, 9.6%, 12%, 22.1% and 72.4% for clinically significant prostate cancer, respectively. On T2-weighted magnetic resonance imaging the cancer detection rate in the peripheral zone was significantly higher for PI-RADS, version 2 category 4 than for overall PI-RADS, version 2 category 4 in the peripheral zone (all prostate cancer 36.6% vs 48.1%, p = 0.001, and clinically significant prostate cancer 22.9% vs 32.6%, p = 0.002).The cancer detection rate increases with higher PI-RADS, version 2 categories.

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.juro.2017.03.131