Gc. Durkan et Dr. Greene, Diagnostic dilemmas in detection of prostate cancer in patients undergoingtransrectal ultrasound-guided needle biopsy of the prostate, PROSTATE C, 3(1), 2000, pp. 13-20
Transrectal ultrasound (TRUS)-guided needle biopsy of the prostate is a wid
ely practised method for obtaining high quality tissue cores for histologic
al diagnosis in men with suspected prostate cancer. Technological advances
such as high-resolution hand held probes with biplanar imaging capabilities
and spring-loaded needles that easily permit multiple biopsies to be obtai
ned have ensured that this technique has rightly taken its place at the for
efront of prostate cancer diagnosis. However, the capacity for TRUS to iden
tify prostate cancer remains limited because of poor specificity and variab
ility in the ultrasonic appearance of tumours. Widespread prostate-specific
antigen (PSA) testing has increasingly resulted in greater numbers of rumo
urs being diagnosed at an early stage, when they are clinically impalpable
and ultrasonically indistinguishable from surrounding normal prostate tissu
e. In this setting, the principal role for TRUS is to facilitate systematic
sampling of all relevant zones of the prostate. Despite advances in techno
logy and in our understanding of this disease, a number of diagnostic dilem
mas arise. Should we perform lesion-directed or random biopsies? How many t
issue cores should be obtained for optimal diagnostic yield, to reduce the
incidence of false-negative biopsies? What areas of the prostate should be
biopsied to give the best diagnostic results? If the initial biopsies fail
to detect cancer, who should undergo repeat biopsy? Some have also voiced c
oncern that TRUS risks identifying clinically insignificant disease. Here,
we review the studies that have addressed these issues and have lead to the
evolution of TRUS-guided prostate biopsy into an essential tool in the det
ection of carcinoma of the prostate.