Litcius/Paper detail

Clinical validation of IsoPSA, a single parameter, structure-focused assay for improved detection of prostate cancer: A prospective, multicenter study

Eric A. Klein, Alan W. Partin, Yair Lotan, Jack Baniel, Martin Dineen, Jason Hafron, Kannan Manickam, Marc Pliskin, Matthew Wagner, Aimee Kestranek, Mark Stovsky

2022Urologic Oncology Seminars and Original Investigations18 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

BACKGROUND: IsoPSA is a blood-based test that assesses prostate cancer (CaP) risk by partitioning and detecting cancer-specific structural isoforms of prostate specific antigen (PSA) with an aqueous 2- phase system. OBJECTIVE: To validate the diagnostic performance of IsoPSA for High-Grade CaP and Any CaP risk on biopsy in men age ≥ 50 with total PSA ≥ 4 ng/ml. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: Prospective, multicenter study of 888 men scheduled for prostate biopsy at 8 academic and community sites between August 2015 and August 2020. INTERVENTION: IsoPSA test. OUTCOME MEASUREMENTS AND STATISTICAL ANALYSIS: Receiver operating characteristic and likelihood ratio analysis used to validate diagnostic performance for previously established IsoPSA Index cutoffs for High-Grade CaP (Gleason Score ≥ 7) and Any CaP (Gleason Score ≥ 6), compare IsoPSA to total PSA and % free PSA, and evaluate subgroups (total PSA 4-10 ng/ml, total PSA > 10 ng/ml, biopsy naïve, prior negative biopsy). RESULTS AND LIMITATIONS: The disease prevalence was 35.6% (High-Grade CaP) and 58.9% (Any CaP). The area under the receiver operating characteristic curve was 0.783 (High-Grade CaP) and 0.770 (Any CaP). IsoPSA outperformed total PSA and % free PSA on area under the receiver operating characteristic curve, specificity, positive and negative predictive value at similar sensitivity. Using selected IsoPSA Index cutoffs, an estimated 46% (High-Grade CaP) and 42% (Any CaP) of biopsies could be avoided in low-risk patients. IsoPSA displayed statistically informative likelihood ratio-based predictive characteristics. IsoPSA maintained accuracy in clinically relevant subgroups. CONCLUSIONS: IsoPSA diagnostic performance and predictive value is validated for High-Grade CaP and Any CaP in men age ≥ 50 with total PSA ≥ 4 ng/ml undergoing diagnostic biopsy. IsoPSA outperforms total and % free PSA in discriminating the risk of prostate cancer on biopsy. PATIENT SUMMARY: IsoPSA has the potential to reduce unnecessary biopsies and improve the risk-benefit ratio for CaP early detection.

Topics & Concepts

Receiver operating characteristicProstate cancerMedicineBiopsyProspective cohort studyProstate-specific antigenUrologyArea under the curvePredictive value of testsCancerLikelihood ratios in diagnostic testingProstate biopsyProstateInternal medicineOncologyProstate Cancer Diagnosis and TreatmentProstate Cancer Treatment and ResearchAdvanced Biosensing Techniques and Applications