| Literature DB >> 34593984 |
Erik Margolis1, Gordon Brown2, Alan Partin3, Ballentine Carter3, James McKiernan4, Ronald Tutrone5, Phillipp Torkler6, Christian Fischer6, Vasisht Tadigotla7, Mikkel Noerholm6, Michael J Donovan8, Johan Skog7.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The ability to discriminate indolent from clinically significant prostate cancer (PC) at the initial biopsy remains a challenge. The ExoDx Prostate (IntelliScore) (EPI) test is a noninvasive liquid biopsy that quantifies three RNA targets in urine exosomes. The EPI test stratifies patients for risk of high-grade prostate cancer (HGPC; ≥ Grade Group 2 [GG] PC) in men ≥ 50 years with equivocal prostate-specific antigen (PSA) (2-10 ng/mL). Here, we present a pooled meta-analysis from three independent prospective-validation studies in men presenting for initial biopsy decision.Entities:
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Year: 2021 PMID: 34593984 PMCID: PMC9184274 DOI: 10.1038/s41391-021-00456-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Prostate Cancer Prostatic Dis ISSN: 1365-7852 Impact factor: 5.455
Pooled cohort demographic and clinical characteristics.
| Pooled cohort | 1st Validation (JAMA oncology 2016) | 2nd Validation (European urology 2018) | 3rd Validation/utility study (PCAN 2020) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Total patient N | 1212 | 519 | 503 | 190a |
| Age median, IQR | 63 (58, 69) | 64 (58, 68) | 64 (59, 69) | 63 (58, 69) |
| PSA median, IQR | 5.2 (4.3, 6.6) | 5.1 (4.3, 6.4) | 5.4 (4.4, 6.7) | 5.2 (4.4, 6.7) |
| Family History | ||||
| Yes | 223 (18.4%) | 117 (22.5%) | 72 (14.3%) | 34 (17.9%) |
| No | 987 (81.4%) | 402 (77.5%) | 431 (85.7%) | 154 (81.1%) |
| NA | 2 (0.2%) | 0 (0%) | 0 (0%) | 2 (1%) |
| Ethnicity | ||||
| African American | 204 (16.8%) | 87 (16.8%) | 71 (14.1%) | 46 (24.2%) |
| Asian/Pacific Islander | 37 (3.1%) | 13 (2.5%) | 18 (3.6%) | 6 (3.2%) |
| Caucasian | 854 (70.5%) | 377 (72.6%) | 350 (69.6%) | 127 (66.8%) |
| Other | 96 (7.9%) | 35 (6.8%) | 52 (10.4%) | 9 (4.8%) |
| NA | 21 1.7(%) | 7 (1.3%) | 12 (2.4%) | 2 (1.1%) |
| DRE | ||||
| Nonsuspicious | 888 (73%) | 352 (67.8%) | 379 (75.3%) | 157 (82.6%) |
| Suspicious | 155 (13%) | 77 (14.8%) | 63 (12.5%) | 15 (7.9%) |
| NA | 169 (14%) | 90 (17.3%) | 61 (12.1%) | 18 (9.5%) |
| Grade Group | ||||
| Benign | 585 (48.3%) | 268 (51.6%) | 234 (46.5%) | 83 (43.7%) |
| GG 1 (GS3 + 3) | 261 (21.5%) | 103 (19.8%) | 111 (22.1%) | 47 (24.7%) |
| GG 2 (GS3 + 4) | 198 (16.3%) | 84 (16.2%) | 86 (17.1%) | 28 (14.7%) |
| GG 3 (GS4 + 3) | 84 (6.9%) | 36 (6.9%) | 26 (5.2%) | 22 (11.6%) |
| GG 4 (GS8) | 39 (3.2%) | 11 (2.1%) | 26 (5.2%) | 2 (1.1%) |
| GG 5 (> GS8) | 45 (3.7%) | 17 (3.3%) | 20 (4.0%) | 8 (4.2%) |
aPatients from the control arm with biopsy outcome results.
Fig. 1Pooled EPI performance using the area under the receiver operator characteristic (AUC) curve.
Area under receiver operating characteristic (AUC) curves illustrates performance of pooled EPI (n = 1212) to discriminate HGPC vs. PCPT-RC, ERSPC RC, and PSA.
Performance comparison (AUC, 95%CI) of the EPI test to alternative models and DeLong test for significance. EPI has a significantly higher AUC than all alternative models.
| Test/Model | ||
|---|---|---|
| AUC (95%CI) | ||
| EPI | 0.70 (0.67–0.73) | – |
| PCPT2.0-RC | 0.62 (0.59–0.66) | <0.001 |
| ERSPC | 0.59 (0.56–0.63) | <0.001 |
| PSA | 0.56 (0.53–0.60) | <0.001 |
Performance of the EPI test with a cut point of 15.6 in the pooled cohort.
| EPI ≥ cut point | EPI < cut point | Total | Performance | (95%CI) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Biopsy positive/≥GG2 | 338 | 28 | 366 | Sensitivity, 92.3% | (89.1–94.9) |
| Biopsy negative/GG1 | 591 | 255 | 846 | Specificity, 30.1% | (27.1–33.4) |
| Total | 929 | 283 | 1212 | PPV, 36.4% | (33.3–39.6) |
| NPV, 90.1% | (86.0–93.3) | ||||
| Prevalence | 30.2% | Predicted negative | 23.3% |
Performance of the EPI test with a cut point of 20 in the pooled cohort.
| EPI ≥ cut point | EPI < cut point | Total | Performance, % | (95%CI) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Biopsy positive/≥GG2 | 320 | 46 | 366 | Sensitivity, 87.4 | (83.6–90.6) |
| Biopsy negative/GG1 | 486 | 360 | 846 | Specificity, 42.6 | (39.2–46.0) |
| Total | 806 | 406 | 1212 | PPV, 39.7 | (36.3–43.2) |
| NPV, 88.7 | (85.2–91.6) | ||||
| Prevalence | 30.2% | Predicted negative | 33.5% |
Fig. 2EPI score and probability of HGPC on a TRUS prostate biopsy.
Bar-chart illustration of binned EPI scores and the probability of finding HGPC on a subsequent TRUS 12-core biopsy.
Fig. 3PSA values and probability of HGPC on a TRUS prostate biopsy.
Bar-chart illustration of binned PSA values and the probability of finding HGPC on a subsequent TRUS 12-core biopsy.
Fig. 4Pooled EPI Decision-curve analysis.
Decision-curve analysis demonstrating net clinical benefit of EPI in the overall biopsy-decision process.