Biomedical Engineering IDP, University of California, Los Angeles, CA 90095, USA.
Urol Oncol. 2011 May-Jun;29(3):334-42. doi: 10.1016/j.urolonc.2011.02.014.
Prostate biopsy (Bx) has for 3 decades been performed in a systematic, but blind fashion using 2D ultrasound (US). Herein is described the initial clinical evaluation of a 3D Bx tracking and targeting device (Artemis; Eigen, Grass Valley, CA). Our main objective was to test accuracy of the new 3D method in men undergoing first and follow-up Bx to rule out prostate cancer (CaP).
Patients in the study were men ages 35-87 years (66.1 ± 9.9), scheduled for Bx to rule out CaP, who entered into an IRB-approved protocol. A total of 218 subjects underwent conventional trans-rectal US (TRUS); the tracking system was then attached to the US probe; the prostate was scanned and a 3D reconstruction was created. All Bx sites were visualized in 3D and tracked electronically. In 11 men, a pilot study was conducted to test ability of the device to return a Bx to an original site. In 47 men, multi-parametric 3 Tesla MRI, incorporating T2-weighted images, dynamic contrast enhancement, and diffusion-weighted imaging, was performed in advance of the TRUS, allowing the stored MRI images to be fused with real-time US during biopsy. Lesions on MRI were delineated by a radiologist, assigned a grade of CaP suspicion, and fused into TRUS for biopsy targeting.
3D Bx tracking was completed successfully in 180/218 patients, with a success rate approaching 95% among the last 50 men. Average time for Bx with the Artemis device was 15 minutes with an additional 5 minutes for MRI fusion and Bx targeting. In the tracking study, an ability to return to prior Bx sites (n=32) within 1.2 ± 1.1 mm SD was demonstrated and was independent of prostate volume or location of Bx site. In the MRI fusion study, when suspicious lesions were targeted, a 33% Bx-positivity rate was found compared with a 7% positivity rate for systematic, nontargeted Bx (19/57 cores vs. 9/124 cores, P=0.03).
Use of 3D tracking and image fusion has the potential to transform MRI into a clinical tool to aid biopsy and improve current methods for diagnosis and follow-up of CaP.
前列腺活检(Bx)在过去 30 年中一直采用系统但盲目的方式进行,使用二维超声(US)。本文描述了一种新的 3D 前列腺活检跟踪和靶向设备(Artemis;Eigen,Grass Valley,CA)的初步临床评估。我们的主要目的是测试新的 3D 方法在首次和随访前列腺活检中排除前列腺癌(CaP)的准确性。
研究中的患者为年龄 35-87 岁(66.1±9.9)的男性,计划进行 Bx 以排除 CaP,并参与了经 IRB 批准的方案。共有 218 名患者接受了常规经直肠超声(TRUS)检查;然后将跟踪系统连接到 US 探头;对前列腺进行扫描并创建 3D 重建。所有 Bx 部位均在 3D 中可视化,并进行电子跟踪。在 11 名男性中,进行了一项试点研究以测试设备返回原始部位的能力。在 47 名男性中,在 TRUS 之前进行了多参数 3T MRI,包括 T2 加权图像、动态对比增强和扩散加权成像,允许将存储的 MRI 图像与活检期间的实时 US 融合。放射科医生对 MRI 上的病变进行了描绘,分配了 CaP 可疑程度,并融合到 TRUS 中进行活检靶向。
在 218 名患者中成功完成了 180/218 例 3D Bx 跟踪,最后 50 名患者的成功率接近 95%。使用 Artemis 设备进行 Bx 的平均时间为 15 分钟,另外还需要 5 分钟用于 MRI 融合和 Bx 靶向。在跟踪研究中,证明了在 1.2±1.1mmSD 内返回先前 Bx 部位的能力,并且与前列腺体积或 Bx 部位无关。在 MRI 融合研究中,当靶向可疑病变时,靶向活检的阳性率为 33%,而系统非靶向活检的阳性率为 7%(19/57 个核心与 9/124 个核心,P=0.03)。
使用 3D 跟踪和图像融合有可能将 MRI 转化为一种辅助活检的临床工具,并改进目前用于诊断和随访 CaP 的方法。