The Press

New tech targets prostate cancer

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Bruce Bennett says new technology that zeroes in on hard-totarget prostate cancer is a great advancemen­t – he just wishes it had arrived earlier, and cheaper.

After three biopsies, dating back to 2005, that missed his cancer, Bennett – a 65-year-old retired Wellington teacher – was tested earlier this year with new fusion biopsy technology, which found a tumour that was treated with a prostatect­omy in January.

But whatever the cost, and the outcome, Bennett said he was sold on the technology.

‘‘For men it’s a great advance because it’s much more accurate,’’ he said.

In a New Zealand first, urologists Rod Studd and Grant Russell of Wellington’s private Wakefield Hospital have brought the German technology to New Zealand.

They hope one day the transperin­eal fusion-guided biopsy procedure, which costs between $8000 and $10,000, will become part of the public health system.

Studd said Bennett had made an excellent recovery with no incontinen­ce and minimal pain.

The whole procedure takes about 20 minutes under general anaestheti­c. A needle is inserted via the perineum, rather than the rectum, which reduces the risk of post-procedure infection. Following the biopsy, the patient heads home later that same day.

Bennett’s story highlighte­d the limitation­s of standard biopsy and the improved outcomes that can be achieved with the new technique, Studd said.

By blending MRI and ultrasound, via a rectal probe, the technique shows the suspected cancerous area. Once a potential tumour is identified, the fusion biopsy can be performed through the perineum with significan­tly increased accuracy over a more traditiona­l rectal biopsy.

About 3000 Kiwi men are diagnosed with prostate cancer every year, and 600 of them die.

Repeated biopsies can lead to inflammati­on and infection.

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