## Correct Answer: C. Prostatic venous plexus Metastatic spread of prostate cancer to the lumbar vertebrae occurs via the **prostatic venous plexus**, which is a rich network of valveless veins surrounding the prostate gland. This plexus drains bidirectionally—both anteriorly to the internal iliac veins and posteriorly to the vertebral venous plexus (Batson's plexus). The posterior drainage pathway is the critical route for vertebral metastases. When intra-abdominal pressure increases (Valsalva maneuver, straining, coughing), blood can reflux through the prostatic venous plexus directly into the vertebral venous plexus, bypassing the lungs and liver—explaining why prostate cancer commonly metastasizes to the lumbar and sacral spine before distant organs. This valveless system allows retrograde flow, making the vertebral column a preferential site for metastatic seeding. The prostatic venous plexus is the anatomical gateway; the internal iliac vein is merely a downstream tributary, not the direct route to vertebrae. ## Why the other options are wrong **A. Inferior vesical vein** — The inferior vesical vein is a tributary of the internal iliac vein and drains the bladder and prostate anteriorly. While it carries venous blood from the prostate, it does not provide direct access to the vertebral venous plexus. This option confuses a tributary vessel with the actual route of vertebral spread, which requires posterior drainage through the prostatic venous plexus. **B. Internal iliac vein** — The internal iliac vein is the main venous trunk receiving blood from the prostatic venous plexus, but it is not the route to vertebral metastases. Blood draining via the internal iliac vein enters the systemic circulation and typically reaches the lungs first. The vertebral spread occurs via the *posterior* component of the prostatic plexus that directly communicates with Batson's plexus, bypassing the internal iliac system. **D. Transcoelomic spread** — Transcoelomic (peritoneal) spread is a mechanism for intra-abdominal malignancies (ovarian, gastric cancers) and occurs via peritoneal fluid. Prostate cancer is extraperitoneal and does not spread transcoelomic ally to vertebrae. This is a distractor that tests knowledge of spread mechanisms in different organ systems. ## High-Yield Facts - **Prostatic venous plexus** is valveless and drains bidirectionally—anteriorly to internal iliac veins and posteriorly to vertebral venous plexus (Batson's plexus). - **Batson's plexus** (vertebral venous plexus) allows retrograde flow during increased intra-abdominal pressure, enabling direct metastatic seeding to lumbar and sacral vertebrae. - **Prostate cancer** preferentially metastasizes to bone (especially lumbar spine, pelvis, femur) via the prostatic venous plexus route, often before lung involvement. - **Valveless venous drainage** of the prostate explains why vertebral metastases occur without obligatory passage through the lungs or liver. - **Osteoblastic metastases** (sclerotic bone lesions) are characteristic of prostate cancer vertebral metastases, visible on plain radiographs and CT spine. ## Mnemonics **BATSON'S PLEXUS ROUTE** **B**idirectional flow (anterior + posterior) → **A**nterior to iliac (systemic), **T**o vertebrae posteriorly → **S**pread to **O**sseous (bone) → **N**o valves = **S**eeding. Use when remembering why prostate cancer loves the spine. **PROSTATIC PLEXUS = GATEWAY** Prostatic venous plexus is the anatomical gateway; it connects to Batson's plexus posteriorly. Think: **P**rostate → **P**lexus → **P**osterior → **P**ine (vertebral column). Three P's for vertebral spread. ## NBE Trap NBE pairs "internal iliac vein" (a true drainage route) with vertebral metastases to trap students who know the prostate drains to the iliac system but confuse the *anterior* drainage pathway with the *posterior* vertebral route. The key discriminator is the **bidirectional nature and posterior component** of the prostatic venous plexus. ## Clinical Pearl In Indian clinical practice, prostate cancer patients often present with back pain and vertebral metastases (especially lumbar spine) before systemic symptoms—a direct consequence of the prostatic venous plexus–Batson's plexus connection. MRI spine is the gold standard for detecting these osteoblastic lesions and assessing spinal cord compression, a common complication requiring urgent intervention. _Reference: Bailey & Love's Short Practice of Surgery (Prostate anatomy and venous drainage); Robbins Pathology Ch. 20 (Metastatic spread mechanisms)_
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