Prostate Biopsy & Grading of Tumours

Why Prostate Biopsy?

A prostate biopsy is almost always necessary to diagnose prostate cancer. PSA and DRE alone are rarely sufficient to make the diagnosis. Even in those cases where cancer is obvious a biopsy is necessary to access some treatment options.

When & How?

READ THE FOLLOWING CAREFULLY. FAILURE TO FOLLOW THE INSTRUCTIONS MAY RESULT IN CANCELLATION OF THE BIOPSY AND A DELAY IN DIAGNOSIS.

Wait times for prostate biopsy are variable. For a routine template biopsy, the wait time is 1-2 months. For template + target biopsies the wait time 3-6 months. Here is how the process works.

  1. We send the request for biopsy to the hospital. They contact you with a date and time.

  2. You read and follow the instructions below.

  3. Call our office to schedule an appointment to review the results once the biopsy is completed.

Prostate biopsies can be done in one of 3 ways.

Your urologist will discuss the most appropriate approach to prostate biopsy based on your individual circumstances. Prostate biopsies may be performed by a radiologist or urologist. The pattern of practice in our group is for a radiologist to do the biopsy.

Preparation

Ensure you review these instructions once a decision to have the prostate biopsy is made and a second time 1 week prior to your biopsy.

 

How

Prostate biopsy is performed by a Radiologist. A template biopsy typically takes about 20 minutes. A template + fusion biopsy takes about 40 minutes.

  1. Ultrasound probe is placed into the rectum. A small lubricated ultrasound probe is placed in the rectum. It is roughly the size of a finger.

  2. Freezing the nerves. Local anesthetic is used to freeze the nerves and biopsy is generally well tolerated. Men who are unable to tolerate biopsy under local anesthetic may require sedation. This can be arranged but biopsies under sedation require special resources and may require a change in venue and may take longer to arrange.

  3. Needle gun removes cores of prostate tissues. A small needle gun is then used to remove small core-shaped samples from the prostate. Each core measures about 10-20 mm (1/2 inch) in length and 2-3 mm wide. Most men describe the pain as a 2-3/10 where 10 is the worst pain they have had. Please make the radiologist aware if you are having more pain than you think you should.

Ultrasound is used to take a representative sample from different parts of the gland. Ultrasound cannot diagnose prostate cancer by itself, but it can direct the Radiologist to take representative samples from the prostate.

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What to Expect After the Biopsy

While most men do not have any serious problems following a prostate biopsy, serious complications may occur. Mild discomfort will typically resolve in 1-2 days. Complications of prostate biopsy include the following:

 

Interpreting Biopsy Results

Your urologist will ALWAYS want to review the results of your biopsy, even if no cancer is found. It can take 2-3 weeks to receive a result and the hospital does not notify us of the date of your biopsy. Please call our office as soon as you have been given a date for your biopsy and our office will arrange an appointment. We may send you results of the biopsy in preparation for that meeting.

No Cancer is Found in the Biopsy

The absence of cancer in the biopsy is always better than the alternative but does merit some discussion. The various possible options in a ‘no cancer’ result are described below.

 

Cancer is Found in the Biopsy

If the biopsy shows cancer don’t panic. Nothing will change in the coming weeks or months - and likely not for years if at all. Everything with prostate cancer comes down to risk - always remember to interpret biopsy results in the context of other important factors including the grade, stage of tumor and imaging results.

Multiple types of information are derived from prostate biopsy. No all of the types are equally important - the grade of the tumor should be weighted most heavily.

The Gleason Grading System and the Grade Group Systems

Virtually all prostate cancers are adenocarcinoma. There are rare types of prostate cancer, but these account for much less than 5% of cancers (e.g., small cell carcinoma). Adenocarcinoma originates from the cells responsible for the prostatic secretions - the epithelial cells within the acini of the gland. There are hundreds of thousands of prostate acini in the prostate and they create small amounts of fluid rich in PSA. The secreted fluid is then collected in the small ducts until they empty into the urethra during ejaculation. Prostate cancer develops when the cells start behaving in an unregulated manner and have the potential to spread.

The appearance of the prostate cancer under a microscope which correlates (follows/trends) with genetic changes in the cells and the behavior of the cancer over time.

The original Gleason grading system is a way to correlate the appearance with risk. The interpretation and application have changed over time - this is important and merits some background.

Primary Gleason GRADE + Secondary Gleason GRADE = Gleason SCORE

To address the confusion in communicating risk with the Gleason Scoring system, the Grade Group system was developed. The Grade Group system has kept the best parts of the Gleason Scoring system (which is well entrenched and understood by doctors) and removed some of the confusion. It has the smallest number of categories that necessary to define meaningful differences in risk. The new grading system:

  1. Provides more accurate grade stratification (the meaningful differences between groups is highlighted better).

  2. There are fewer groups than before.

  3. The lowest risk group is now 1/5 - which has the potential to reduce over-treatment of low-risk patients.

The Grade Group provides a score out of 5 (five) with the lowest risk group being 1/5 and the highest 5/5.

Translating the Gleason Grade into the Grade Group Systems

Grade Group Gleason Grade Combination and Score
1/5 LOWEST RISK GROUP
3+3=6/10
2/5 3+4=7/10
3/5 4+3=7/10
4/5 4+4=7/10
5/5 HIGHEST RISK GROUP
4+5=9/10
5+4=9/10
5+5=10/10

Prostate Biopsy Frequently Asked Questions