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Influence of Preoperative Positive Seminal Vesicle Biopsy on the Staging of Prostatic Cancer
52
Citations
10
References
1994
Year
Surgical OncologyProstatic CancerPathologyPositive BiopsySurgeryGynecology OncologyTesticular TumoursOncologyGenitourinary CancerSurgical PathologyUrogynecologyRadiation OncologyInfertilityHistopathologyProstatic DiseaseUrologyGroup 1MedicineSeminal Vesicles
A total of 71 patients with clinically localized prostatic cancer underwent preoperative biopsy of each seminal vesicle. Group 1 (67 patients) underwent 2 seminal vesicle biopsies before lymph node dissection and vesiculo-prostatectomy, while group 2 (4 patients) underwent seminal vesicle biopsy and lymph node dissection before radiation therapy. In group 1 there were 11 positive biopsies (16.5%) with a median prostate specific antigen (PSA) level of 24 ng./ml. (range 11 to 45). Of the biopsies 56 were normal, with a median PSA level of 11.8 (range 3.5 to 88, p < 0.008). Histological examination of the seminal vesicles on the prostatectomy specimen revealed 18 cases of seminal vesicle invasion (sensitivity 61%, specificity 100%, positive predictive value 100% and negative predictive value 87.5%). A positive biopsy was correlated with the mean tumor volume (10.3 cc with positive biopsies versus 4.9 cc with negative biopsies) and local invasion (positive margins in 36% versus 9%, respectively, and capsular perforation in 81% versus 25%, respectively). In group 2 the 4 seminal vesicle biopsies and lymph node dissections were positive. Overall (groups 1 and 2), positive seminal vesicle biopsies were predictive of lymph node involvement in 47% of the cases versus 7% when biopsies were negative (p > 0.001). The postoperative course was significantly different (local recurrence and metastases in 45% versus 9%, respectively, and median interval 8.8 months versus 18.3 months, respectively, p < 0.001). Seminal vesicle biopsy appears to have a satisfactory yield only in cases with a PSA level of greater than 10 ng./ml. A positive seminal vesicle biopsy confirms the presence of extraprostatic invasion of clinically localized cancer in a given patient. Seminal vesicle biopsy allows for better staging of prostatic cancer.
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