Introduction: In patients with a clinically unilateral palpable and/or visible lesion confined to the prostate on digital rectal examination and transrectal ultrasonography, the findings of biopsy specimens of a clinically unsuspicious lobe do not reflect TNM staging results (2002 classification). In patients with such a unilateral lesion, we compared the biopsy results of a clinically unsuspicious lobe with the pathological assessment of the radical prostatectomy specimen and evaluated the importance of the results of biopsy specimens in an unsuspi cious lobe. Patients and Methods: Between April 2000 and August 2004, 97 prostatic cancer patients without neoadjuvant therapy underwent a radical retropubic prostatectomy. In the patients with a unilateral lesion on digital rectal examination and/or transrectal ultrasound, the preoperative prostate-specific antigen levels, the results of contralateral biopsy specimens, and contralateral cancer foci in radical prostatectomy specimens were examined. Results: Of 39 patients with a unilateral palpable and/or visible lesion, 15 had contralateral positive biopsy findings, while 24 had contralateral negative biopsy findings. In a pathological analysis of prostatectomy specimens, a significantly higher rate of clinically significant cancer foci and a larger cancer volume in a clinically unsuspicious lobe have been observed in patients with contralateral positive biopsy findings than in patients with contralateral negative biopsy findings (p < 0.001). Moreover, contralateral cancer foci in patients with a contralateral positive biopsy specimen exhibited a more ominous state, such as seminal vesicle invasion, extraprostatic extension, and a positive surgical margin, than those in patients with a contralateral negative biopsy specimen (40.0 vs. 8.3%, p = 0.017). However, in a pathological analysis of both ipsilateral and contralateral cancer foci, the proportion of ominous pathological findings did not differ between the patients with a contralateral positive biopsy and those with a contralateral negative biopsy. Conclusions: In patients with clinically unilateral palpable and/or visible tumors confined to the prostate, the results of a bilateral biopsy need not be used to determine the clinical stage. However, in patients with positive biopsy results for an unsuspicious lobe, urologists should perform an extended surgical resection.

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