
- Vol 48 No 2
- Volume 48
- Issue 2
TP-Bx: The answer to rising infectious complications?
"A more standardized protocol that is office based, reliable, and reproducible as well as cost- and time-efficient is required to entice more urologists to abandon the TRUS-BX approach," writes J. Brantley Thrasher, MD.


J. Brantley Thrasher, MD, a Urology Times editorial consultant, is executive director of the American Board of Urology, Charlottesville, VA.
The transrectal ultrasound-guided approach to prostate biopsy (TRUS-BX) has been one of the more frequently performed procedures for urologists for almost two decades. For many of us, it presented a significant advance in biopsy, using ultrasound guidance to more accurately image the prostate in lieu of digital rectal palpation. It also spared countless finger and glove biopsies known to be a significant occupational hazard. However, the use (and misuse) of antibiotics such as fluoroquinolones has resulted in growing concern over fluroquinolone-resistant (FQR) rectal flora and infectious complications following TRUS-BX.
A variety of strategies have been reported to address this concern. Identifying patients as high risk for quinolone resistance and adding a single dose of IM gentamicin or a second-generation cephalosporin such as ceftriaxone has been one effective strategy
More recently, authors have successfully employed povidone-iodine rectal washes as an inexpensive agent to reduce post-biopsy infection and avoid additional antibiotic use (J Vis Exp 2015; [103]:52670). The transperineal approach to prostate biopsy (TP-BX) has seen a resurgence in popularity due to a lower risk of infectious complications
Recent reports from the UK and Australia have described a more standardized local anesthetic approach to TP-BX that combines locally anesthetized perineal skin with a subcutaneous perineal nerve block combined with a standard periprostatic nerve block
I don’t believe the issue here is that urologists are so firmly entrenched in TRUS-BX that they won’t embrace the need for an innovative strategy to reduce the risk of infectious complications. Urologists have proven to be innovators in a multitude of areas, including early adoption of ESWL, lasers, and robotics. Most see the wisdom of avoiding biopsies through the rectum as the flora continues to adapt to our strategies of adjusting antibiotic prophylaxis. However, a more standardized protocol that is office based, reliable, and reproducible as well as cost- and time-efficient is required to entice more urologists to abandon the TRUS-BX approach.
Send your comments to Dr. Thrasher c/o Urology Times, at
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