4.6 Review

Radical or Not-So-Radical Prostatectomy: Do Surgical Margins Matter?

Journal

CANCERS
Volume 14, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/cancers14010013

Keywords

prostate cancer; margins of resection; radical prostatectomy; prognosis; pathology

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Funding

  1. University of Patras Research Committee [54210000]

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Prostate cancer is the second most common malignancy in men, and prostatectomy is a commonly used treatment modality. The presence of positive margins in the surgical specimen affects patients' prognosis and determines the appropriate therapeutic plan. Proper reporting and detailed description of the status of the margins are crucial for patient management.
Simple Summary Prostate cancer is the second most common noncutaneous malignancy in men. Prostatectomy is a commonly used treatment modality for selected patients. The prostate's ill-defined borders and its vicinity with vital structures complicate the wide excision of the organ, resulting in positive margins of resection. Neoplastic infiltration of margins of resection in prostatectomy specimens affects patients' prognosis. The surgical technique and surgeons' expertise affect the incidence of margin positivity. The location and the extent of positive margins diversify the risk of recurrence, with basal infiltration and multifocal foci of positive margins behaving more aggressively. Pathologists are encouraged to thoroughly report the status of margins of resection, as they provide important information for patients' prognosis and enable the clinician to decide upon the most appropriate subsequent therapeutic steps. Prostate cancer is the second most common malignancy in men, and prostatectomy is the treatment of choice for most patients with at least low risk of progression. The presence of positive margins in the radical prostatectomy specimen is considered an adverse pathologic feature, and may prompt additional therapeutic intervention in the patients. The absence of a distinct capsule around the prostate and intraoperative manipulations that aim to minimize postoperative adverse effects, complicate its wide removal. Proper handling of the specimen during the gross processing is essential for accurate determination of the status of margins or resection. Positive margins, defined as the presence of neoplastic glands in the highlighted-with-ink margin of resection, range from 6-38%. The surgical technique, surgeon's expertise and tumor (i.e., grade and stage) and patients' (i.e., BMI) characteristics affect the rate of margin positivity. Extensive or multifocal and nonanterior/nonapical positive margins are linked with higher recurrence rates, especially in organ-confined disease, underscoring the need for treating these patients more aggressively. In summary, detailed description of the status of the margins should be performed in every pathology report to determine patients' prognosis and the most appropriate therapeutic plan.

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