peripheral blood samples were collected from patients before RP, in the recovery room afterward, and at 3-5 weeks after surgery. A reverse-transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction assay for PSA mRNA was used to detect prostate cells in cell-saver and peripheral blood samples. Patients were followed after surgery with PSA measurements to assess biochemical failure.
RESULTSPSA-expressing cells were detected in 88% of cell-saver reservoir and 13% of preoperative blood samples. No PSA-expressing prostate cells were detected in any peripheral blood samples collected 3-5 weeks after surgery. Analysis of data with 40 months of follow-up showed IAT was not an independent predictor of biochemical failure in multivariate analysis.
CONCLUSIONSAlthough IAT blood contains PSA-expressing cells, none could be detected 3-5 weeks after surgery. IAT during RP was not associated with a greater risk of biochemical failure.
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