Biparametric 3T Magnetic Resonance Imaging for prostatic cancer detection in a biopsy-naïve patient population: a further improvement of PI-RADS v2?
- PMID: 27842676
- DOI: 10.1016/j.ejrad.2016.10.009
Biparametric 3T Magnetic Resonance Imaging for prostatic cancer detection in a biopsy-naïve patient population: a further improvement of PI-RADS v2?
Erratum in
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Erratum to "Biparametric 3t magnetic resonance imaging for prostatic cancer detection in a biopsy-naïve patient population: A further improvement of PI-RADS v2? [Eur. J. Radiol. 85 (12) (2016) 2269-2274]".Eur J Radiol. 2017 Feb;87:125. doi: 10.1016/j.ejrad.2016.12.011. Epub 2016 Dec 26. Eur J Radiol. 2017. PMID: 28034566 No abstract available.
Abstract
Objectives: To prospectively determine the diagnostic accuracy of a biparametric 3T magnetic resonance imaging protocol (BP-MRI) for prostatic cancer detection, compared to a multiparametric MRI protocol (MP-MRI), in a biopsy naïve patient population.
Methods: Eighty-two untreated patients (mean age 65±7.6years) with clinical suspicion of prostate cancer and/or altered prostate-specific antigen (PSA) levels underwent a MP-MRI, including T2-weighted imaging, diffusion-weighted imaging (with the correspondent apparent diffusion coefficient maps) and dynamic contrast enhanced sequence, followed by prostate biopsy. Two radiologists reviewed both the BP-MRI and the MP-MRI protocols to establish a radiological diagnosis. Receiver operating characteristics curves were obtained to determine the diagnostic performance of the two protocols.
Results: The mean PSA level was 8.8±8.1ng/ml. A total of 34 prostatic tumors were identified, with a Gleason score that ranged from 3+3 to 5+4. Of these 34 tumors, 29 were located within the peripheral zone and 5 in the transitional zone. BP-MRI and MP-MRI showed a similar performance in terms of overall diagnostic accuracy, with an area under the curve of 0.91 and 0.93, respectively (p=n.s.).
Conclusions: BP-MRI prostate protocol is feasible for prostatic cancer detection compared to a standard MP-MRI protocol, requiring a shorter acquisition and interpretation time, with comparable diagnostic accuracy to the conventional protocol, without the administration of gadolinium-based contrast agent.
Keywords: MRI; Medical oncology; PI-RADS; Prostate cancer; Urologic diseases.
Copyright © 2016 Elsevier Ireland Ltd. All rights reserved.
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