| Literature DB >> 32699318 |
Michelle M Kouspou1, Jenna E Fong1, Nadine Brew1, Sarah T F Hsiao1, Seanna L Davidson2, Peter L Choyke3, Tony Crispino4, Suneil Jain5, Guido W Jenster6, Beatrice S Knudsen7, Jeremy L Millar8,9, Nicole Mittmann10, Charles J Ryan11, Bertrand Tombal12,13, Mark Buzza14.
Abstract
Prostate cancer is a heterogeneous cancer with widely varying levels of morbidity and mortality. Approaches to prostate cancer screening, diagnosis, surveillance, treatment and management differ around the world. To identify the highest priority research needs across the prostate cancer biomedical research domain, Movember conducted a landscape analysis with the aim of maximizing the effect of future research investment through global collaborative efforts and partnerships. A global Landscape Analysis Committee (LAC) was established to act as an independent group of experts across urology, medical oncology, radiation oncology, radiology, pathology, translational research, health economics and patient advocacy. Men with prostate cancer and thought leaders from a variety of disciplines provided a range of key insights through a range of interviews. Insights were prioritized against predetermined criteria to understand the areas of greatest unmet need. From these efforts, 17 research needs in prostate cancer were agreed on and prioritized, and 3 received the maximum prioritization score by the LAC: first, to establish more sensitive and specific tests to improve disease screening and diagnosis; second, to develop indicators to better stratify low-risk prostate cancer for determining which men should go on active surveillance; and third, to integrate companion diagnostics into randomized clinical trials to enable prediction of treatment response. On the basis of the findings from the landscape analysis, Movember will now have an increased focus on addressing the specific research needs that have been identified, with particular investment in research efforts that reduce disease progression and lead to improved therapies for advanced prostate cancer.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32699318 PMCID: PMC7462750 DOI: 10.1038/s41585-020-0349-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Rev Urol ISSN: 1759-4812 Impact factor: 14.432
Fig. 1Overview of the landscape analysis process.
The landscape analysis methodology involved one-to-one interviews, qualitative analysis and consultation with international experts (the Landscape Analysis Committee (LAC)). The research needs were then ranked using agreed prioritization criteria at the LAC workshop meeting.
Research prioritization criteria
| Thematic area | Criteria | Definition | Refs |
|---|---|---|---|
| Health outcomes | Improved patient QOL | The research has the potential to improve the QOL of a patient within a specific step of the treatment journey and/or improved QOL during and beyond the treatment process | [ |
| Research significance | Reduces burden of disease | The research has the potential to markedly reduce the burden of disease. Research needs to be important, innovative, non-redundant and address a key research gap | [ |
| Implementation | Implementable | The barriers to implementation are not insurmountable (the research is technically and practically feasible), and the research has the potential to move to the next stage of development (is translational or clinical) | [ |
| Equity, ethics, fairness | Health inequities | The research has the potential to positively impact and be accessible to a diverse range of men across a diverse range of geographies | [ |
| State of current research | Significant current momentum | Research in the field that could enable significant improvement in the research need, if Movember were to support it | NA |
NA, not applicable; QOL, quality of life.
Research needs by disease stages
| Disease stage | Research need number | Research need description | Interview mentions | LAC prioritization score |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Screening and early diagnosis | Establish more sensitive and specific tests to improve disease screening and diagnosis | 6 | 5 | |
| Localized disease | Develop indicators to better stratify low-risk prostate cancer in determining which men should go on active surveillance | 18 | 5 | |
| Standardized active surveillance guidelines to aid decision-making | 4 | 4 | ||
| Educate men about the benefits of active surveillance and ways of reducing anxiety | 4 | 4 | ||
| Improve current standard-of-care treatment (radiotherapy and surgery) to maximize patient mental and physical well-being | NA | 3 | ||
| Determine how the interplay between genetics and lifestyle impacts disease progression | <4 | 1 | ||
| Locally advanced disease | Determine the most effective way of treating biochemical recurrence in order to improve survival and enhance quality of life | NA | 3 | |
| Improve the use of androgen deprivation therapy to minimize adverse effects of treatment | 4 | 3 | ||
| Perform genomic profiling early to optimize treatment and identify likely responders | 5 | 3 | ||
| Oligometastatic disease | More accurately define oligometastatic prostate cancer and determine the best treatment strategy | 7 | 4 | |
| Advanced disease | Determine the optimal treatment sequence for men with mCRPC that will lead to the best outcomes for a man’s specific tumour type | 4 | 3 | |
| Determine the potential of immunotherapy as a treatment option for mCRPC | 6 | 1 | ||
| Disease biology | Better understand the biology of disease progression in order to optimize treatment decisions | 5 | 3 | |
| Treatment optimization | Further progress precision medicine such as use of biomarkers that can enable personalized treatment decision | 32 | 3 | |
| Integrate companion diagnostics (for example, liquid and/or tissue biopsy and imaging modalities) into randomized clinical trials to predict treatment response | 5 | 5 | ||
| Demonstrate clinical utility of validated liquid biopsies | NA | 4 | ||
| Replace tissue biopsies with non-invasive biomarkers (such as liquid biopsy or imaging modalities) | NA | 3 |
Research needs in a solid circle are insights from the stakeholder interviews that were prioritized for workshop discussion (those mentioned by four or more interviewees); research needs in an open circle are the LAC's recommendation for discussion. LAC, Landscape Analysis Committee; mCRPC, metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer; NA, not available.
Fig. 2Summary of prioritized research needs from the landscape analysis.
Each research need, ordered according to its relevant disease stage, was plotted by the number of times it was mentioned in the thought leader and patient interviews (x axis) against the prioritization score it was given by the Landscape Analysis Committee (LAC; y axis). Research needs in a solid circle are insights from the stakeholder interviews that were prioritized for workshop discussion (those mentioned by four or more interviewees); research needs in an open circle are the LAC’s recommendation for discussion.