- Main
Impact of Prostate Health Index Results for Prediction of Biopsy Grade Reclassification During Active Surveillance.
- Filson, Christopher;
- Zhu, Kehao;
- Huang, Yijian;
- Zheng, Yingye;
- Newcomb, Lisa;
- Williams, Sierra;
- Brooks, James;
- Dash, Atreya;
- Ellis, William;
- Gleave, Martin;
- Liss, Michael;
- Martin, Frances;
- McKenney, Jesse;
- Morgan, Todd;
- Wagner, Andrew;
- Sokoll, Lori;
- Sanda, Martin;
- Chan, Daniel;
- Lin, Daniel;
- Carroll, Peter
- et al.
Published Web Location
https://doi.org/10.1097/JU.0000000000002852Abstract
PURPOSE: We assessed whether Prostate Health Index results improve prediction of grade reclassification for men on active surveillance. METHODS AND MATERIALS: We identified men in Canary Prostate Active Surveillance Study with Grade Group 1 cancer. Outcome was grade reclassification to Grade Group 2+ cancer. We considered decision rules to maximize specificity with sensitivity set at 95%. We derived rules based on clinical data (R1) vs clinical data+Prostate Health Index (R3). We considered an or-logic rule combining clinical score and Prostate Health Index (R4), and a 2-step rule using clinical data followed by risk stratification based on Prostate Health Index (R2). Rules were applied to a validation set, where values of R2-R4 vs R1 for specificity and sensitivity were evaluated. RESULTS: We included 1,532 biopsies (n = 610 discovery; n = 922 validation) among 1,142 men. Grade reclassification was seen in 27% of biopsies (23% discovery, 29% validation). Among the discovery set, at 95% sensitivity, R2 yielded highest specificity at 27% vs 17% for R1. In the validation set, R3 had best performance vs R1 with Δsensitivity = -4% and Δspecificity = +6%. There was slight improvement for R3 vs R1 for confirmatory biopsy (AUC 0.745 vs R1 0.724, ΔAUC 0.021, 95% CI 0.002-0.041) but not for subsequent biopsies (ΔAUC -0.012, 95% CI -0.031-0.006). R3 did not have better discrimination vs R1 among the biopsy cohort overall (ΔAUC 0.007, 95% CI -0.007-0.020). CONCLUSIONS: Among active surveillance patients, using Prostate Health Index with clinical data modestly improved prediction of grade reclassification on confirmatory biopsy and did not improve prediction on subsequent biopsies.
Many UC-authored scholarly publications are freely available on this site because of the UC's open access policies. Let us know how this access is important for you.
Main Content
Enter the password to open this PDF file:
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-