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Transrectal ultrasound (TRUS) can be used to examine the prostate and assess the size of the gland accurately. But the main function of TRUS is to enable precise needle placement in the prostate during systematic prostate biopsy (1).
To help men decide whether to have a prostate biopsy, healthcare professionals should discuss with them their PSA level, digital rectal examination findings (including an estimate of prostate size) and comorbidities, together with their risk factors (including increasing age and black African or black Caribbean ethnicity) and any history of a previous negative prostate biopsy (2)
The information from the multiparametric MRI (mpMRI) scan taken before prostate biopsy is used to determine the best needle placement. In rare cases, the biopsy may be MRI-guided (the needle is inserted within the MRI machine). In most cases, the biopsy that follows the mpMRI will be ultrasound-guided, but the specific area(s) targeted will be predetermined by the mpMRI data (2)
A prostate biopsy for histological confirmation should not be performed in cases where clinical suspicion of prostate cancer is high, because of a high PSA value and evidence of bone metastases (identified by a positive isotope bone scan or sclerotic metastases on plain radiographs), unless this is required as part of a clinical trial (2).
Previous negative prostate biopsy results are associated with a reduced risk of finding a high-grade cancer (1).
A core member of the urological cancer MDT should review the risk factors of all men who have had a negative first prostate biopsy, and discuss with the man that (1):
Magnetic resonance imaging for rebiopsy (2)
Reference:
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