Prostate Biopsy: Difference between revisions
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
Urology4all (talk | contribs) No edit summary |
Urology4all (talk | contribs) |
||
Line 12: | Line 12: | ||
* Trajectory of needle is through rectum and into prostate | * Trajectory of needle is through rectum and into prostate | ||
Insert image (wiki) | |||
=== Transperineal biopsy === | === Transperineal biopsy === | ||
Line 20: | Line 21: | ||
* '''Disadvantages:''' | * '''Disadvantages:''' | ||
*# '''May need for more anesthesia''', but can be done under local anesthetic | *# '''May need for more anesthesia''', but can be done under local anesthetic | ||
Insert image (wiki) | |||
== <span style="color:#ff0000">Preparing for biopsy</span> == | == <span style="color:#ff0000">Preparing for biopsy</span> == | ||
Line 32: | Line 34: | ||
=== <span style="color:#ff0000">Antibiotic prophylaxis</span> === | === <span style="color:#ff0000">Antibiotic prophylaxis</span> === | ||
* '''Recommended for all patients undergoing prostate biopsy''' | * '''Transrectal''' | ||
* '''Regimen:''' | **'''Recommended for all patients undergoing prostate biopsy''' | ||
** '''2019 AUA Antibiotic Prophylaxis Guidelines: fluoroquinolone OR 1st/2nd/3rd gen. cephalosporin (ceftriaxone commonly used) + aminoglycoside''' | ** '''Regimen:''' | ||
** 2015 CUA Antibiotics Prophylaxis Guidelines: no specific regimen | *** '''[https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/31441676/ 2019 AUA Antibiotic Prophylaxis Guidelines]: fluoroquinolone OR 1st/2nd/3rd gen. cephalosporin (ceftriaxone commonly used) + aminoglycoside''' | ||
** Campbell’s: For patients at risk for developing endocarditis or infection of prosthetic joints, pacemakers, and automated implanted cardiac defibrillators, prophylaxis should consist of intravenous ampicillin (vancomycin, if penicillin allergic) and gentamicin preoperatively, followed by 2 to 3 days of an oral fluoroquinolone. | *** 2015 CUA Antibiotics Prophylaxis Guidelines: no specific regimen | ||
** | *** Campbell’s: For patients at risk for developing endocarditis or infection of prosthetic joints, pacemakers, and automated implanted cardiac defibrillators, prophylaxis should consist of intravenous ampicillin (vancomycin, if penicillin allergic) and gentamicin preoperatively, followed by 2 to 3 days of an oral fluoroquinolone. | ||
** '''The use of targeted prophylaxis after rectal flora swabbing and culture has been shown to have some utility compared with empirical antibiotic prophylaxis in some series''' | *** Presence of fluoroquinolone resistant organisms on a rectal swab culture may not always be associated with clinical infection. | ||
****A multi-institutional cohort study of 136 men undergoing rectal swab cultures immediately before biopsy found fluoroquinolone resistant E. coli in 22% of cultures. Patients received ciprofloxacin +/- gentamycin for prophylaxis. Post-biopsy fever occurred in 5 patients, and only 1 of them had a positive rectal screen for resistant E. coli.[https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/21334021/] | |||
*** '''The use of targeted prophylaxis after rectal flora swabbing and culture has been shown to have some utility compared with empirical antibiotic prophylaxis in some series''' | |||
* '''2011 Cochrane review evaluating antibiotic prophylaxis for TRUS biopsy of the prostate''' | * '''2011 Cochrane review evaluating antibiotic prophylaxis for TRUS biopsy of the prostate''' | ||
** 19 studies including 3,599 patients. | ** 19 studies including 3,599 patients. |
Revision as of 14:58, 10 October 2022
Contraindications (3):
- Significant coagulopathy
- Severe immunosuppression
- Acute prostatitis
Approach: Transrectal vs. transperineal
Transrectal biopsy
- Trajectory of needle is through rectum and into prostate
Insert image (wiki)
Transperineal biopsy
- Advantages:
- Reduced infectious and other complication rates
- Improved identification of apical tumors
- Can be done in patients without a rectum (e.g., surgical extirpation, congenital anomaly)
- Disadvantages:
- May need for more anesthesia, but can be done under local anesthetic
Insert image (wiki)
Preparing for biopsy
Anti-coagulation
- Low-dose aspirin does not need to be discontinued[1]
- Anticoagulant therapy
- Warfarin and clopidogrel should be stopped 7-10 days before prostate biopsy
- Novel oral anticoagulants apixaban, dabigatran, and rivaroxaban are stopped 2-5 days before
- Rivaroxaban may increase stroke risk if stopped; therefore bridging with some other anticoagulant such as heparin is recommended.
- For patients with underlying coagulopathy or on warfarin, prostatic biopsy should not be performed until the INR has been corrected < 1.5 if the patient has low risk for a thromboembolic event. Because of the higher risk for thromboembolic events (e.g., mechanical valves) on warfarin, bridging anticoagulation with unfractionated heparin or low-molecular weight heparin is suggested.
Antibiotic prophylaxis
- Transrectal
- Recommended for all patients undergoing prostate biopsy
- Regimen:
- 2019 AUA Antibiotic Prophylaxis Guidelines: fluoroquinolone OR 1st/2nd/3rd gen. cephalosporin (ceftriaxone commonly used) + aminoglycoside
- 2015 CUA Antibiotics Prophylaxis Guidelines: no specific regimen
- Campbell’s: For patients at risk for developing endocarditis or infection of prosthetic joints, pacemakers, and automated implanted cardiac defibrillators, prophylaxis should consist of intravenous ampicillin (vancomycin, if penicillin allergic) and gentamicin preoperatively, followed by 2 to 3 days of an oral fluoroquinolone.
- Presence of fluoroquinolone resistant organisms on a rectal swab culture may not always be associated with clinical infection.
- A multi-institutional cohort study of 136 men undergoing rectal swab cultures immediately before biopsy found fluoroquinolone resistant E. coli in 22% of cultures. Patients received ciprofloxacin +/- gentamycin for prophylaxis. Post-biopsy fever occurred in 5 patients, and only 1 of them had a positive rectal screen for resistant E. coli.[2]
- The use of targeted prophylaxis after rectal flora swabbing and culture has been shown to have some utility compared with empirical antibiotic prophylaxis in some series
- 2011 Cochrane review evaluating antibiotic prophylaxis for TRUS biopsy of the prostate
- 19 studies including 3,599 patients.
- Comparing antibiotics vs. placebo/no antibiotics (9 trials): antibiotics significantly reduce risk of (5):
- Bacteriuria (risk ratio (RR) 0.25)
- UTI (RR 0.37)
- Bacteremia (RR 0.67)
- Fever (RR 0.39)
- Hospitalization (RR 0.13)
- Most data derived from studies with quinolones
- Comparing antibiotics +/- enema, only the risk of bacteremia (RR 0.25, 95% CI 0.08-0.75) was diminished in the antibiotic + enema group
- Comparing short-course (1 day) versus long-course (3 days) antibiotics (7 trials): long course significantly better than short-course treatment only for bacteriuria (RR 2.09)
- Comparing single versus multiple dose: significantly greater risk of bacteriuria for single-dose treatment (RR 1.98)
- Comparing oral versus systemic administration - intramuscular injection (IM), or intravenous (IV) - of antibiotics, no significant differences in the groups for bacteriuria, fever, UTI and hospitalization.
- Zani, Emerson L., Otavio Augusto Camara Clark, and Nelson Rodrigues Netto Jr. "Antibiotic prophylaxis for transrectal prostate biopsy." Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews 5 (2011).
Cleansing Enema
- Decreases the amount of feces in the rectum, thereby producing a superior acoustic window for prostate imaging; effect on reducing infections is debatable
- Many clinicians may elect not to use an enema because this may allow more spontaneous performance of a prostate biopsy
- 2015 CUA Antibiotics Prophylaxis Guidelines: insufficient evidence to recommend routine use of enemas
Analgesia
- Proper analgesia is performed by TRUS-guided periprostatic infiltration of local anesthetic injection (5 mL lidocaine) bilaterally at the level of the seminal vesicles near the bladder base (near the nerve bundles)
- Direct infiltration into the prostate (intraprostatic injection) can augment the anesthetic benefit seen with periprostatic injection
- Typically performed using lidocaine, a long 22-gauge spinal needle, and the biopsy channel of the ultrasound probe
Position
- Patients are usually placed in the left lateral decubitus position with knees and hips flexed 90°.
- The lithotomy position is used by some and is preferred for transperineal biopsies, brachytherapy treatment planning, or placement of fiducial gold markers for external-beam therapy
- The best visualization of the biopsy path is in the sagittal plane
- INSERT FIGURE
Number and location of cores
- The extended 12-core systematic biopsy that incorporates apical and far-lateral cores is the current recommended method.
- Previously, the standard number of cores was 6. However, it has been shown that increasing the number of cores from 6 to 12 significantly increases cancer detection rate.
- Increasing the number of cores to 18 or 21 (often termed saturation biopsy) as an initial biopsy strategy does not appear to result in a similar increase from 6 to 12. Saturation biopsy is more likely to be considered in the setting of a prior negative biopsy, though in the era of MRI this may not be relevant.
- The transitional zone and seminal vesicles are not routinely sampled because these regions have been shown to have consistently low yields for cancer detection at initial biopsy
- Isolated transition zone tumors without peripheral zone involvement occur < 5% of the time.
- Transitional zone and anteriorly directed biopsies may occasionally prove necessary to diagnose prostate cancer in those patients with persistently elevated PSA levels and prior negative biopsies. More recently, MRI is often used to detect and guide biopsies of these anterior tumors that may escape standard TRUS prostate biopsy
- The seminal vesicles are not routinely performed unless there is a palpable abnormality, with some authors recommending seminal vesicle biopsy when the PSA is > 30 or if brachytherapy is being considered
- Previously, the standard number of cores was 6. However, it has been shown that increasing the number of cores from 6 to 12 significantly increases cancer detection rate.
- When biopsy specimens are taken from different sextant areas of the prostate, they should be submitted to pathology in separate containers
- An AUA white paper recently outlined the recommended processing of prostate biopsy samples, and the review did not provide compelling evidence that individual site–specific labeling of cores benefits clinical decision making regarding the management of prostate cancer (Bjurlin et al, 2013). [still relevant?]
Complications[3]
- Bleeding
- Hematuria (≈50%)
- Needs intervention (e.g. clot retention) in <1%
- Hematospermia (≈50%)
- Can persist >4 week after biopsy in ≈30%
- Rectal bleeding (≈30%)
- Needs intervention in ≈2.5%
- Hematuria (≈50%)
- Infection (prostatitis, fever, epididymitis) ≈5-7%
- Needs hospitalization in ≈1-3%
- Rates of hospital admission and mortality after TRUS-biopsy[4]
- Population: Population-based cohort study of 75,190 men who underwent a transrectal ultrasound guided biopsy in Ontario, Canada, between 1996 and 2005
- Results:
- The 30-day hospital admission rate increased significantly from 1% in 1996 to 4% in 2005, the majority (72%) of which were for infection related reasons.
- The overall 30-day mortality rate was 0.09% but did not change during the study period.
- Conclusions: Hospital admission rates for complications following TRUS guided prostate biopsy have increased dramatically during the last 10 years primarily due to an increasing rate of infection related complications.
- Risk factors for prostate biopsy-related infection (6):
- Non-White race
- Increased number of comorbidities
- Diabetes mellitus
- Prostate enlargement
- Foreign travel
- Recent antibiotic use
- Rates of hospital admission and mortality after TRUS-biopsy[4]
- Needs hospitalization in ≈1-3%
- Transient (≈1 month) lower urinary tract symptoms 6-25%
- Urinary retention <1%
- Transient (≈1 month) erectile dysfunction <1%
- False-negative (variable rate based on PSA)
- Initial cancer detection rate for patients with a PSA between 4 and 10 μg/mL is 22%; subsequent biopsies for an elevated PSA result in a cancer detection rate of 10% on the second biopsy, 5% on the third, and 4% on the forth
- Data from the large European screening study suggested that as the number of biopsy sessions increased to ultimately diagnose prostate cancer, the cancers diagnosed after several biopsy sessions were generally of lower grade and stage
- Antibiotics
Insert figure
Advanced and investigational techniques for prostate biopsy
- Newer imaging modalities allowing for the potential of targeted biopsy include Doppler to determine vessel density, determination of the elasticity of an area, endorectal MRI with dynamic contrast enhancement and diffusion weighting, and MRI spectroscopy
- TRUS/MRI fusion via a software platform
- Combines the familiarity of realtime TRUS guidance with detailed information from a diagnostic multiparametric MRI and superimposes both images via software image reconstruction
- Cognitive fusion biopsy
- Requires no additional equipment and relies on an experienced operator reviewing a suspicious lesion on MRI and then directing the biopsy needle in the direction of suspicious lesions during the standard TRUS biopsy procedure.
- A primary disadvantage of this technique is the inability to record and confirm biopsy needle placement as well as interuser variability. In expert hands, this has been shown to be as good as software fusion
Questions
- List uses of a TRUS
- What is the differential diagnosis of a hypoechoic lesion on TRUS?
- List complications of a TRUS biopsy
- What are some advantages/disadvantages of transperineal biopsy?
Answers
- List uses of a TRUS
- Estimate prostate volume
- Locate focal prostate abnormalities
- Assess for obstructive cause of infertility
- Guide prostate biopsies
- Guide placement of brachytherapy seeds
- What is the differential diagnosis of a hypoechoic lesion on TRUS?
- Granulomatous prostatitis
- Prostatic infarct
- Lymphoma
- BPH nodules
- Normal urethra
- List complications of a TRUS biopsy
- Hematuria
- Hematospermia
- Rectal bleeding
- Infection
- Urinary retention
- False-negative
- What are some advantages/disadvantages of transperineal biopsy?
- Advantages:
- Reduced infectious and other complication rates
- Improved identification of apical tumors
- Disadvantages:
- Needs more extensive anesthesia
Next Chapter: Management of Localized Prostate Cancer
References
- Wein AJ, Kavoussi LR, Partin AW, Peters CA (eds): CAMPBELL-WALSH UROLOGY, ed 11. Philadelphia, Elsevier, 2015, chap 109