The impact of benign tissue within cancerous regions in the prostate: Characterizing sparse and dense prostate cancers on whole-mount histopathology and on multiparametric MRI
Olga Starobinets , Jeffry P. Simko , Matthew Gibbons , John Kurhanewicz , Peter R. Carroll , Susan M. Noworolski
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Purpose
To establish the incidence, size, zonal location and Gleason Score(GS)/Gleason Grade Group(GG) of sparse versus dense prostate cancer (PCa) lesions and to identify the imaging characteristics of sparse versus dense cancers on multiparametric MRI (mpMRI).
Methods
Seventy-six men with untreated PCa were scanned prior to prostatectomy with endorectal-coil 3 T MRI including T2-weighted imaging, diffusion-weighted imaging and dynamic contrast-enhanced MRI. Cancerous regions were outlined and graded on the whole-mount, processed specimens, with tissue compositions estimated. Regions with cancer comprising <50 % and ≥ 50 % of the tissue were considered sparse and dense respectively. Regions of interest (ROI) were manually drawn on T2-weighted MRI. Within each patient, area-weighted ROI averages were calculated for each imaging measure for each tissue type, GS/GG, and sparse/dense composition.
Results
A large number of cancer regions were identified on histopathology (n = 1193: 939 (peripheral zone (PZ)) and 254 (transition zone (TZ))). Thirty-seven percent of these lesions were sparse. Sparse lesions were primarily low-grade with the majority of PZ and 100 % of TZ sparse lesions ≤GS3 + 3/GG1. Dense lesions were significantly larger than sparse lesions in both PZ and TZ, p < 0.0001. On imaging, 246/45 PZ and 109/8 TZ dense/sparse 2D cancerous ROIs were drawn. Sparse GS3 + 3 and sparse ≥GS3 + 4 cancers did not have significantly different MRI intensities to dense GS3 + 3 cancers, while sparse GS3 + 3/GG1 cancers differed from benign, p < 0.05.
Conclusion
Histopathologically identified prostate cancer lesions were sparse in 37 % of cases. Sparse cancers were entirely low grade in TZ and predominantly low-grade in PZ and generally small, thus likely posing lower risk for spread and progression than dense lesions. Sparse lesions were not distinguishable from dense lesions on mpMRI, but could be distinguished from benign tissues.
期刊介绍:
Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) is the first international multidisciplinary journal encompassing physical, life, and clinical science investigations as they relate to the development and use of magnetic resonance imaging. MRI is dedicated to both basic research, technological innovation and applications, providing a single forum for communication among radiologists, physicists, chemists, biochemists, biologists, engineers, internists, pathologists, physiologists, computer scientists, and mathematicians.