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Can MRI of the Prostate Combined With a Radiomics Evaluation Determine the Invasive Capacity of a Tumour

Prostate Cancer

Prostate cancer is the most common cancer diagnosed in men in Canada. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) may become a valuable tool to non-invasively identify prostate cancer and assess its biological aggressiveness, which in turn will help doctors make better decisions about how to treat an individual patient's prostate cancer.

Despite the promise of MRI for detecting and characterizing prostate cancer, there are several recognized limitations and challenges. These include lack of standardized interpretation and reporting of prostate MRI exams.

The investigators propose to validate and improve a computer program computerized prediction tool that will use information from MR images to inform us how aggressive a prostate cancer is. The hypothesis is that this computer-aided approach will increase the reproducibility and accuracy of MRI in predicting the tumor biology information about the imaged prostate cancer.

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Conditions de participation

  • Sexe:

    MALE
  • Âges admissibles:

    0 and up

Critères de participation

Inclusion Criteria:

An appropriate diagnostic MRI-P, defined as:

* Being performed on 3T MRI at the Halifax Infirmary Building
* Taken place within 5 weeks of study enrolment
* Having a detectable nodule which anatomically localizes to prostate cancer (PCa) identified in diagnostic biopsy specimen
* Acquired T1+contrast, T2, and attenuated diffusion coefficient (ADC) series axial images of the prostate

An appropriate diagnostic biopsy, defined as:

* Taken place within 2 months of the participant's MRI-P 1
* Taken place within 3 months of participant's study enrolment
* Reports diagnosis of PCa
* Reports a systematic assessment of the biopsy, assessing at least 12 cores
* Reports at least on core involved with PCa and this core must anatomically localise to a nodule seen on MRI-P 1

Exclusion Criteria:

* Past prostatic interventions which would influence the prostate's structure
* Alterations to physiological testosterone levels
* Inability to position one's self in a reproducible fashion for an MRI-P
* Patient factors reported to produce significant artifact on MRI-P 1

Lieu de l'étude

Victoria General Hospital
Victoria General Hospital
Halifax, Nova Scotia
Canada

Contactez l'équipe d'étude

Backup Contact

Beverly Lieuwen

[email protected]
Primary Contact

Michael J Kucharczyk, MB BCh BAO MPH FRCPC

[email protected]
9024736185
Étude parrainée par
Nova Scotia Health Authority
Participants recherchés
Plus d'informations
ID de l'étude: NCT05024162