scholarly journals A Prospective Adaptive Utility Trial to Validate Performance of a Novel Urine Exosome Gene Expression Assay to Predict High-grade Prostate Cancer in Patients with Prostate-specific Antigen 2–10 ng/ml at Initial Biopsy

2018 ◽  
Vol 74 (6) ◽  
pp. 731-738 ◽  
Author(s):  
James McKiernan ◽  
Michael J. Donovan ◽  
Eric Margolis ◽  
Alan Partin ◽  
Ballentine Carter ◽  
...  
2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
James McKiernan ◽  
Mikkel Noerholm ◽  
Vasisht Tadigotla ◽  
Sonia Kumar ◽  
Phillipp Torkler ◽  
...  

Abstract Background : Initial prostate biopsy often fails to identify prostate cancer resulting in patient anxiety, especially when clinical features such as prostate specific antigen (PSA) remain elevated, leading to the need for repeat biopsies. Prostate biomarker tests, such as the ExoDx™ Prostate (IntelliScore) , or EPI test, have been shown to provide individualized risk assessment of clinically significant prostate cancer at initial biopsy; however, the performance in the repeat biopsy setting is not well established. Methods : As part of a previous prospective clinical validation study evaluating the performance of the EPI test, we collected first-catch, non-DRE urine samples across 22 sites from men with prior negative biopsy scheduled to undergo a repeat prostate biopsy to rule out prostate cancer. All men were 50 years or older with a PSA 2-10ng/mL. Exosomal mRNA was extracted and expression of three genomic markers, PCA3, ERG and SPDEF was measured. The resulting EPI score was correlated with biopsy results.Results : 229 men with a prior negative biopsy underwent repeat biopsies. ExoDx Prostate demonstrated good performance ruling out high-grade (Grade group 2, GG2, or higher) prostate cancer (HGPCa) using the previously validated 15.6 cut point in the initial biopsy setting. The EPI test yielded an NPV of 92% independent of other clinical features and would have avoided 26% of unnecessary biopsies while missing only five patients with HGPCa (2.1%). Furthermore, the EPI test provided additional information at a cut-point of 20 and 29.6 with an NPV of 94%, potentially delaying 35% and 61% of unnecessary biopsies, respectively. Conclusions : The EPI test provided good performance using the 15.6 cut-point for ruling out HGPCa / GG2 or higher in men undergoing a repeat prostate biopsy with a PSA of 2-10ng/ml. Furthermore, the test utilizes gene expression data independent of clinical features to predict the likelihood of HGPCa / GG2 on a subsequent needle biopsy.


JAMA Oncology ◽  
2016 ◽  
Vol 2 (7) ◽  
pp. 882 ◽  
Author(s):  
James McKiernan ◽  
Michael J. Donovan ◽  
Vince O’Neill ◽  
Stefan Bentink ◽  
Mikkel Noerholm ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
Vol 11 (22) ◽  
pp. 6484-6490
Author(s):  
Yongming Kang ◽  
Pan Song ◽  
Kun Fang ◽  
Bo Yang ◽  
Luchen Yang ◽  
...  

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