• Y.E. Almalki
  • M.G.E.-D. Mansour
  • S.A. Ali
  • M.A.A. Basha
  • M.M. Abdelkawi
  • S.K. Alduraibi
  • Z.A. Almushayti
  • A.S. Aldhilan
  • M. Aboualkheir
  • D. Amin
  • M. Metkees
  • A.M.A. Basha
  • N.Y. Ebaid
This study aimed to examine the validity and reproducibility of strain elastography (SE) for detecting prostate cancer (PCa) in patients with elevated prostate-specific antigen (PSA) levels. The study included 107 patients with elevated PSA levels. All eligible patients underwent transrectal ultrasound (TRUS) with real-time elastography (RTE) to detect suspicious lesions. Two readers independently evaluated the lesions and assigned a strain ratio and elastography score to each lesion. Histopathology was used as a reference standard to estimate the validity of RTE in predicting malignant lesions. An intraclass correlation (ICC) was performed to detect reliability of the strain ratios and elastography scores. TRUS-guided biopsy detected malignancies in 64 (59.8%) patients. TRUS with RTE revealed 122 lesions. The strain ratio index (SRI) cut-off values to diagnose malignancy were 4.05 and 4.35, with sensitivity, specificity, and accuracy of 94.7%, 91.3%, and 93.4%, respectively. An elastography score > 3 was the best cut-off value for detecting malignancy. According to readers, the sensitivity, specificity, and accuracy were 91.3–94.7%, 89.5–93.4%, and 91.3–90.9%, respectively. Excellent inter-reader agreement was recorded for SRI and elastography scores, with ICC of 0.937 and 0.800, respectively. SE proves to be an efficient tool for detecting PCa with high accuracy in patients with elevated PSA levels. © The Author(s) 2024.
Original languageEnglish
Article number 2917
JournalScientific Reports
Volume14
Issue number1
DOIs
StatePublished - 1 Dec 2024

    Research areas

  • prostate specific antigen, diagnostic imaging, elastography, human, male, pathology, prostate, prostate tumor, reproducibility, sensitivity and specificity, Elasticity Imaging Techniques, Humans, Male, Prostate, Prostate-Specific Antigen, Prostatic Neoplasms, Reproducibility of Results, Sensitivity and Specificity, Prostate/diagnostic imaging, Prostatic Neoplasms/diagnostic imaging

ID: 126166159