Consent and patient preparation
Risks in real numbers, anticoagulation, antibiotic prophylaxis, and the conversation that matters.
Consent is not a form, it is a conversation. The better you understand the risks yourself, the calmer and clearer that conversation becomes. Let us make you genuinely fluent in it.
The raw multi-parametric scan.
Segmented gland, zones and lesion as a rotatable model.
Future spatial-computing workflows for placing the anatomy model in clinical space.
01 The risks, honestly and in numbers 5 min
Patients deserve real figures, not vague reassurance. The main risks:
- Infection and sepsis: the serious one. Roughly 1-3% after TRUS, under 1% after TP.
- Bleeding: blood in the urine and in the semen are very common and settle. Rectal bleeding can occur after TRUS.
- Urinary retention, a vasovagal faint, and procedural discomfort.
- A false negative: a biopsy can miss cancer, which is why a suspicious MRI is not dismissed by negative cores.
The thing to warn about explicitly: blood in the semen can last several weeks and look alarming. If you say so beforehand, it is reassuring rather than frightening.
Which biopsy complication is the one to warn most seriously about?
02 Antibiotics and the infection problem 5 min
Why does route matter so much for infection? Because TRUS pushes the needle through the rectal wall, carrying gut bacteria into the gland and bloodstream.
So TRUS needs antibiotic prophylaxis. The problem is rising resistance, particularly to fluoroquinolones, so many units now use augmented or rectal-swab-guided prophylaxis.
TP avoids the rectum, so its infection risk is much lower and it often needs minimal or no antibiotics.
Which route generally needs more antibiotic cover?
03 Blood thinners and bleeding risk 4 min
Always check the medication list before booking. The usual approach, balanced against the reason they are anticoagulated:
- Low-dose aspirin: often continued, the bleeding risk is low.
- Clopidogrel, DOACs, warfarin: usually managed or paused per local pathway, weighing the clot risk.
If someone has a high thrombotic risk, such as a recent stent, involve the relevant team rather than stopping blindly.
Which is most often safe to continue for a prostate biopsy (per local policy)?
04 Getting consent right 4 min
Pull it together into a clear conversation: the benefits (a diagnosis, a grade, a plan), the risks in numbers, the alternatives (including MRI-led monitoring), and clear safety-netting.
Practical checks: confirm there is no active urine infection, document the discussion, and make sure the patient knows exactly what to do if they become unwell.
After biopsy, a patient should be told to seek urgent help if he develops what?
That is Module 3. You can consent a man for biopsy honestly, in real numbers, and prepare him safely.
Next: The targeted biopsy concept →