Investigative and Clinical Urology (Sep 2020)

Multi-scale tissue architecture analysis of favorable-risk prostate cancer: Correlation with biochemical recurrence

  • Miha Pukl ,
  • Sarah Keyes ,
  • Mira Keyes ,
  • Martial Guillaud ,
  • Metka Volavšek

DOI
https://doi.org/10.4111/icu.20200018
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 61, no. 5
pp. 482 – 490

Abstract

Read online

Purpose: Prostate cancer (PCa) with biopsy-based grade group (GG) 1 or 2 characteristics has a favorable outcome, yet some cases still progress after radical prostatectomy and present with biochemical recurrence (BCR). We hypothesized that the multi-scale tissue architecture (MSTA) analysis score would correlate with the aggressive PCa phenotype and could be used as a tool for risk assessment to improve the management of patients with favorable-risk PCa. Materials and Methods: MSTA was evaluated in needle-biopsy samples from 115 patients with favorable-risk PCa, as defined by GG1 and GG2, a prostate-specific antigen (PSA) level of <10 ng/mL, a clinical stage of cT1c to cT2b, and general Gleason GG (GGG) and expert pathologist-assessed GG (EGG). Algorithms based on Voronoi diagrams were applied to all Feulgen-thionin-stained diagnostic areas. One hundred tissue architecture features were calculated and an MSTA score, a linear combination of the most discriminant features, was generated. Correlation of MSTA score with BCR and other clinical variables was investigated. Results: In a univariate regression model, EGG, clinical stage, and MSTA were significant predictors of BCR (respective p-values: 0.0016, 0.016, and 0.028). Survival analysis showed that patients with a high MSTA score were more likely to experience BCR than were patients with a low MSTA score (odds ratio, 2.9). Combining MSTA with GG assessment resulted in a significant stratification of risk for BCR. Conclusions: MSTA score could be used as an objective adjunct risk stratification tool to pathologist assessments and could improve the management of patients with favorable-risk PCa.

Keywords