Background: The management of localized prostate cancer (PCa) suffers from the dilemma between the overtreatment associated with radical surgery and the uncertainty of active surveillance, highlighting a significant therapeutic gap specifically for intermediate-risk patients and selected low-risk patients. Focal therapy (FT) emerges as an advanced technological solution to balance rigorous oncological control with anatomical and functional preservation. Methods: A narrative review of the literature was conducted to analyze the physical principles underlying various ablative energies (thermal, cryogenic, and non-thermal) as well as radiation-based focal approaches. The review examines the oncological rationale of targeted ablation, recent innovations in imaging, and the expanding clinical scenarios for FT application. Results: Evidence supports the oncological rationale of “Index Lesion” ablation as a targeted curative strategy for clinically significant disease, rather than merely a palliative one. The review highlights the emerging concept of “pushing the disease” and demonstrates the valuable role of salvage focal therapy in the setting of radio-recurrent carcinoma. Furthermore, recent innovations in multiparametric magnetic resonance imaging (mpMRI) and fusion systems have significantly refined patient selection, rendering this minimally invasive approach highly targeted. Conclusions: The current barrier to the universal adoption of focal therapy is the lack of a standardized consensus on the definitions of therapeutic failure and the inadequacy of traditional PSA-based criteria. However, evidence suggests that FT represents a promising, organ-sparing alternative for carefully selected patients with localized PCa, though long-term comparative data are still required.
Orecchia et al. (Sat,) studied this question.
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