Transperineal Versus Transrectal Magnetic Resonance Imaging–targeted and Systematic Prostate Biopsy to Prevent Infectious Complications: The PREVENT Randomized Trial

There is no significant difference between transperineal and transrectal biopsy infection rates without and with targeted antibiotic prophylaxis, respectively. The cancer detection rates were similar. Transperineal biopsy was associated with slightly more pain, but it improves antibiotic stewardship...

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Veröffentlicht in:European urology 2024-07, Vol.86 (1), p.61-68
Hauptverfasser: Hu, Jim C., Assel, Melissa, Allaf, Mohamad E., Ehdaie, Behfar, Vickers, Andrew J., Cohen, Andrew J., Ristau, Benjamin T., Green, David A., Han, Misop, Rezaee, Michael E., Pavlovich, Christian P., Montgomery, Jeffrey S., Kowalczyk, Keith J., Ross, Ashley E., Kundu, Shilajit D., Patel, Hiten D., Wang, Gerald J., Graham, John N., Shoag, Jonathan E., Ghazi, Ahmed, Singla, Nirmish, Gorin, Michael A., Schaeffer, Anthony J., Schaeffer, Edward M.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:There is no significant difference between transperineal and transrectal biopsy infection rates without and with targeted antibiotic prophylaxis, respectively. The cancer detection rates were similar. Transperineal biopsy was associated with slightly more pain, but it improves antibiotic stewardship. The transrectal biopsy approach is traditionally used to detect prostate cancer. An alternative transperineal approach is historically performed under general anesthesia, but recent advances enable transperineal biopsy to be performed under local anesthesia. We sought to compare infectious complications of transperineal biopsy without antibiotic prophylaxis versus transrectal biopsy with targeted prophylaxis. We assigned biopsy-naïve participants to undergo transperineal biopsy without antibiotic prophylaxis versus transrectal biopsy with targeted prophylaxis (rectal culture screening for fluoroquinolone-resistant bacteria and antibiotic targeting to culture and sensitivity results) through a multicenter, randomized trial. The primary outcome was post-biopsy infection captured by a prospective medical review and patient report on a 7-d survey. The secondary outcomes included cancer detection, noninfectious complications, and a numerical rating scale (0–10) for biopsy-related pain and discomfort during and 7-d after biopsy. A total of 658 participants were randomized, with zero transperineal versus four (1.4%) transrectal biopsy infections (difference –1.4%; 95% confidence interval [CI] –3.2%, 0.3%; p = 0.059). The rates of other complications were very low and similar. Importantly, detection of clinically significant cancer was similar (53% transperineal vs 50% transrectal, adjusted difference 2.0%; 95% CI –6.0, 10). Participants in the transperineal arm experienced worse periprocedural pain (0.6 adjusted difference [0–10 scale], 95% CI 0.2, 0.9), but the effect was small and resolved by 7-d. Office-based transperineal biopsy is tolerable, does not compromise cancer detection, and did not result in infectious complications. Transrectal biopsy with targeted prophylaxis achieved similar infection rates, but requires rectal cultures and careful attention to antibiotic selection and administration. Consideration of these factors and antibiotic stewardship should guide clinical decision-making. In this multicenter randomized trial, we compare prostate biopsy infectious complications for the transperineal versus transrectal approach. The absence of infectious compli
ISSN:0302-2838
1873-7560
1873-7560
DOI:10.1016/j.eururo.2023.12.015