Springfield News-Sun

Prostate biopsy technique reduces infection risk

Have a plan this Men’s Health Month.

- By Jason Howland

June is Men’s Health Month. Other than skin cancer, prostate cancer is the most common type of cancer in American men. It’s the second-leading cause of cancer death in American men, behind only lung cancer.

Prostate cancer detected early has the best chance of successful treatment. If an abnormalit­y is found during routine prostate screening, further tests can determine if it’s cancer. And a certain biopsy technique is reducing the risk of infection and helping pinpoint potential cancer.

Nearly 1 million American men have prostate biopsies every year to diagnose cancer.

“Most biopsies in this country are done with a transrecta­l ultrasound machine. The problem with this technique is that there is a risk of infection because the needle traverses the rectal wall and is exposed to fecal contaminat­ion,” says Dr. Julio Gundian Jr., a Mayo Clinic urologist.

But a new way of performing prostate biopsy reduces the chance of infection to nearly zero. It’s an outpatient procedure called “transperin­eal ultrasound-guided MRI fusion biopsy.”

“This technique allows us to avoid the rectum altogether,” says Dr. Gundian. “We place a needle through the perineum, which is the skin between the scrotum and the anus, directly into the prostate.”

The technology superimpos­es an MRI on top of the ultrasound, which gives doctors a better view of the prostate.

“So this makes the procedure no longer a blind technique where we are just randomly obtaining tissue from the prostate,” says Dr. Gundian.

The procedure could catch cancer earlier and nearly eliminate the risk of infection.

 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D ?? A new way of performing prostate biopsy reduces the chance of infection to nearly zero.
CONTRIBUTE­D A new way of performing prostate biopsy reduces the chance of infection to nearly zero.

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