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Polygenic risk scores to stratify cancer screening should predict mortality not incidence

Andrew J. Vickers, Amit Sud, Jonine L. Bernstein, Richard S. Houlston

2022npj Precision Oncology14 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Population-based cancer screening programs such as mammography or colonscopy generally directed at all healthy individuals in a given age stratum. It has recently been proposed that cancer screening could be restricted to a high-risk subgroup based on polygenic risk scores (PRSs) using panels of single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs). These PRSs were, however, generated to predict cancer incidence rather than cancer mortality and will not necessarily address overdiagnosis, a major problem associated with cancer screening programs. We develop a simple net-benefit framework for evaluating screening approaches that incorporates overdiagnosis. We use this methodology to demonstrate that if a PRS does not differentially discriminate between incident and lethal cancer, restricting screening to a subgroup with high scores will only improve screening outcomes in a small number of scenarios. In contrast, restricting screening to a subgroup defined as high-risk based on a marker that is more strongly predictive of mortality than incidence will often afford greater net benefit than screening all eligible individuals. If PRS-based cancer screening is to be effective, research needs to focus on identifying PRSs associated with cancer mortality, an unchartered and clinically-relevant area of research, with a much higher potential to improve screening outcomes.

Topics & Concepts

OverdiagnosisMedicineCancer screeningIncidence (geometry)PopulationCancerInternal medicineOncologyEnvironmental healthOpticsPhysicsGenetic factors in colorectal cancerColorectal Cancer Screening and DetectionBRCA gene mutations in cancer
Polygenic risk scores to stratify cancer screening should predict mortality not incidence | Litcius