학술논문

Prospective validation of microseminoprotein‐β added to the 4Kscore in predicting high‐grade prostate cancer in an international multicentre cohort
Document Type
article
Source
BJU International. 128(2)
Subject
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences
Clinical Sciences
Oncology and Carcinogenesis
Cancer
Urologic Diseases
Prostate Cancer
Aged
Biomarkers
Tumor
Cohort Studies
Humans
Internationality
Kallikreins
Male
Middle Aged
Models
Statistical
Neoplasm Grading
Prospective Studies
Prostatic Neoplasms
Prostatic Secretory Proteins
Prostate‐
specific antigen
microseminoprotein‐
β
kallikreins
4Kscore
prostate biopsy
#ProstateCancer
#PCSM
#uroonc
Prostate-specific antigen
microseminoprotein-β
Urology & Nephrology
Clinical sciences
Oncology and carcinogenesis
Language
Abstract
ObjectivesTo prospectively evaluate the performance of a pre-specified statistical model based on four kallikrein markers in blood (total prostate-specific antigen [PSA], free PSA, intact PSA, and human kallikrein-related peptidase 2), commercially available as the 4Kscore, in predicting Gleason Grade Group (GG) ≥2 prostate cancer at biopsy in an international multicentre study at three academic medical centres, and whether microseminoprotein-β (MSP) adds predictive value.Patients and methodsA total of 984 men were prospectively enrolled at three academic centres. The primary outcome was GG ≥2 on prostate biopsy. Three pre-specified statistical models were used: a base model including PSA, age, digital rectal examination and prior negative biopsy; a model that added free PSA to the base model; and the 4Kscore.ResultsA total of 947 men were included in the final analysis and 273 (29%) had GG ≥2 on prostate biopsy. The base model area under the receiver operating characteristic curve of 0.775 increased to 0.802 with the addition of free PSA, and to 0.824 for the 4Kscore. Adding MSP to the 4Kscore model yielded an increase (0.014-0.019) in discrimination. In decision-curve analysis of clinical utility, the 4Kscore showed a benefit starting at a 7.5% threshold.ConclusionA prospective multicentre evaluation of a pre-specified model based on four kallikrein markers (4Kscore) with the addition of MSP improves the predictive discrimination for GG ≥2 prostate cancer on biopsy and could be used to inform biopsy decision-making.