Transperineal vs Transrectal biopsy
I am up for a biopsy mid-September, and needed advice on which route to take, I called up the UCSF urology dept and was informed that it would be Transrectal not sure if the person knew the right answer. After doing research I found out most center are not performing transrectal but leaning towards transperineal. Any thought from folks who gone through the biopsy process.
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@chardsaus
I would just echo your post so will just say your information is very accurate and helpful.
OMG…your ins co has AI involved?? And you have a gun to your head as well…oh well, best of luck with all that!
Phil
I had a transperineal biopsy about 4 years ago, found Gleason 7 (4+3). This was done at Mayo-Rochester with local numbing, doctor's office. It was not that bad, and took less than 30 minutes. I had 17 biopsy samples taken - First few needles did not feel good, but latter were much much better - I am not good with needles, and still did not think it was horrible. Also, the ability schedule the biopsy within 1-2 weeks and walk in/out within an hour was awesome. Based on my research, I would never go with the transrectal biopsy - This procedure opens you up to more chances for infection and does not allow for a complete biopsy to be performed.
Good luck and pray all goes well for your biopsy and any potential follow-up treatment!!
Jim
It is my "insurance company" because I am using traditional, everyday Medicare. It is the government that is electing to use AI to reduce the costs of care by economically selecting care for Medicare patients (preauthorization). The trial starts January 2026 and is starting in 6 states: Arizona, NJ, Washington, Ohio, Oklahoma and Texas. Involved AI companies stand to reap a bonus of 30% of savings by choosing cheaper (cost-saving) treatments. Sam Altman and other AI leaders praised the administration at a recent AI lunch at the WH. Maybe Open AI is participating in the trial - very likely so. Politics aside, I would like to make my health decisions with my doctor, not an AI algorithm.
I don't think that transperineal is the standard in the USA, yet. I was not offered it in Tucson - a fairly large and progressive city. In fact, researching Mayo Arizona, I found that they claim to be one of the few centers (of excellence!) in Arizona that offers the transperineal biopsy. I am scheduled for transrectal biopsy next week - MRI fusion-guided - because that is what my urologist offers. I will see a Mayo Clinic doctor for consultation and consideration of unique focal treatment in late October, which is the first appointment available. The Mayo doctor said to keep my appointment and get the biopsy done now, then send pathology report to him. I was "freaking out" about this topic until I saw a great, detailed presentation by urologist, Dr. Michael Ahdoot on YouTube. His presentation helped me understand and relax. You should see it!!! https://youtu.be/bK1ozkOgatw?si=Hy1DrRFDWweg8rIz
Thanks for sharing the video. For those interested here is the link to the published article from the randomized trial described. Bottom line is that the difference in the risk of infection between the two procedures is not statistically significant if appropriate antibiotic prophylaxis is used with transrectal procedures (antibiotics are not needed with the transperineal procedure) and the diagnostic yield statistically equivalent. Best to go with your Urologist's experience and recommendations as both procedures have value. Transperineal biopsies may ultimately become the procedure of choice primarily due to concerns regarding emergence of antibiotic resistant bacteria:
https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC11976521/
And this article documents the diagnostic yield from TR vs TP approach:
https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC9883893/pdf/12894_2023_Article_1176.pdf
I had transrectal biopsy in 2023 - no cancer was found. Then I had a Transperineal biopsy 14 months later and advanced cancer was found-gleason 9. My understanding/experience says that Transperineal yields better diagnosis.
That’s because it can get to areas of the prostate that cannot be reached by the transrectal biopsy.
That article posted by @rbtsch1951 suggests that the larger the prostate volume and the higher the grade (T3/4) the better transrectal performed.
The smaller the prostate and lower grade cancers were detected better by transperineal approach due to where the needles enter the gland.
You would have to sort thru all the data/tables, but my read is that TP finds everything - large or small - while TR finds the larger more advanced tumors (in size).
They go on to day that both approaches performed equally…not so sure about that.
Phil
Thanks for the additional information and links.