Athens, Greece (UroToday.com) The objective of this talk given by Dr. Derya Tilki was to review the diagnostic biomarkers in the pre-biopsy setting of prostate cancer and to describe their cost-effectiveness. The ideal biomarkers in the pre-biopsy setting should be able to increase the probability of achieving a positive biopsy. Unfortunately, the positive predictive value of the most used biomarker to date for prostate cancer (PSA), is very low (25-40%) when it is in the range of 4-10 ng/ml.1 Approximately 65-75% and 10-35% of initial and repeat biopsies in the PSA range of 4-10 ng/ml are negative.2 The ideal biomarker will reduce over-detection and the number of unnecessary biopsies, as biopsies have significant adverse events (infection, bleeding), and are associated with pain.3

Currently, available prostate cancer biomarkers in the pre-biopsy setting can be divided into two groups:

  1. Biomarkers used to ascertain who to initially biopsy (PHI, 4K score, Select MDX, MiPS, ExoDx prostate Intelliscore)
  2. Biomarkers used to ascertain when to re-biopsy (PCA3, and ConfirmMDx)

According to the European Association of Urology (EAU) guidelines, to avoid unnecessary biopsies, it is recommended to use risk calculators and additional biomarkers, or imaging.

Dr. Tilki described the important available biomarkers to date. The first biomarkers that were discussed were the PHI and the 4K score. The PHI combines three PSA sub-forms (total PSA, free PSA, and [-2]proPSA) into a single score. It is indicated in men with a PSA of between 2-10 ng/ml and normal digital rectal examination (DRE).4 The PHI score has been shown to correlate with the percentage of a positive biopsy.

The 4K score combines four prostate-specific kallikrein assay results (total PSA, free PSA, intact PSA, and hk2) with age and prior biopsy status. The 4K score gives the percentage risk of having aggressive prostate cancer, and it has been shown to predict the probability of distant metastasis within 20 years.5

In a comparison of 4k to PHI, both similarly improved discrimination when predicting prostate cancer and high-grade prostate cancer. Both are simple blood tests that can reduce the number of unnecessary biopsies compared with screening with PSA only.6 Usage of the 4K score in a hypothetical cohort of 100,000 men suspected of having prostate cancer, can result in an average net savings of 169 million dollars (1694 USD per patient), during the first year after the first urologist visit7 (Figure 1).

Figure 1 – Hypothetical decision model to predict cost-effectiveness of the 4K score:

SIU19_4K_score.png

Dr. Tilki moved on to discuss the SelectMDx biomarker. This is a non-invasive urine assay aimed to improve patient selection for initial biopsy. It is a two-gene risk score combining HOXC6 and DLX1 mRNA expression levels with clinical risk factors, which include:

  1. PSA density
  2. DRE
  3. PSA
  4. Age
  5. History of prostate biopsy
  6. Family history

This biomarker can detect high-grade clinically significant prostate cancer. It has an area under the curve (AUC) of 0.89 for detecting clinically significant cancer, and it is highly correlated with Gleason score as well, with a negative predictive value of 98% for aggressive cancer. Various cost-effectiveness studies of SelectMDx have been done, demonstrating its ability to significantly save money.8 There has been some data showing the potential role of this biomarker to select patients for multiparametric MRI.1

Next, the MI-prostate score was discussed. This score consists of:

  1. PCA3 mRNA urine test
  2. Total PSA in the blood
  3. TMPRSS2-ERG mRNA in the urine

It can predict the presence of overall and high-grade prostate cancer on initial and repeat biopsy.9 It has been shown to have an AUC of 0.772 for the detection of prostate cancer.10

ExoDX prostate (Intelliscore) was discussed next. This urine biomarker utilized exosomes, which are small, double-lipid membrane vesicles that are secreted from cells. This is a urinary exosome gene expression assay that predicts the presence of high-grade prostate cancer for men older than 50 with a PSA of 2-10 ng/ml, referred for an initial biopsy. It gives a score between 0-100 by combining the relative weighted expressions of three gene signatures. A score>15.6 is associated with an increased likelihood of high-grade prostate cancer on a subsequent biopsy. It has an AUC of 0.77 and has been validated in a large multicenter study.11

The next two biomarkers discussed were those used to ascertain when to perform a prostate biopsy. She began with the PCA3 urine test, which is analyzed by RT-PCR and is an assay commercially used today for aiding the diagnosis of prostate cancer. This has been used especially in patients with a previous negative prostate biopsy. PCA3 has been shown to be higher in men with a positive rather than a negative prostate biopsy.12 It has been officially recommended for men at a higher risk of prostate cancer, with a previous negative needle biopsy.

ConfirmMDx is also used to ascertain when to perform a prostate biopsy. ConfirmMDx detects a field-effect or halo associated with the presence of cancer at the DNA level (Figure 2). It detects epigenetic changes and is performed on the residual tissue from previous negative biopsies (up to 30 months old). It helps to distinguish patients who have a true-negative biopsy from those who may have occult cancer. The test helps find men who may benefit from a mpMRI or another biopsy and early detection. It has 90% and 96% negative predictive value for the detection of any cancer and significant prostate cancer, respectively.

In a cost-effectiveness analysis, it has been shown to reduce 1106 unnecessary biopsies for a health plan with 1 million members, with more than 588 USD saved per patient, and more than 530,000 USD saved annually per 1 million members.13

Figure 2 – ConfirmMDx biomarker principle:

SIU19_ConfirmMDx.png

With this large array of available biomarkers, it is extremely difficult to choose which biomarker to use. Unfortunately, high quality direct comparative studies to aid in the decision process are lacking.

The 4M study is a multicenter prospective study by the Dutch Cancer Foundation. The study will compare multiparametric MRI, various biomarkers and risk calculators in ~ 600 men with a PSA>=3 ng/ml. Recruitment and analysis have been completed and the much-awaited results are expected 2020.

Presented by: Derya Tilki, MD, Attending Urologist, Martini-Clinic Prostate Cancer Center, Hamburg, Germany

Written by: Hanan Goldberg, MD, Urology Department, SUNY Upstate Medical University, Syracuse, New-York, USA @GoldbergHanan at the 39th Congress of the Société Internationale d’Urologie, SIU 2019, #SIUWorld #SIU2019, October 17-20, 2019, Athens, Greece

References:

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  2. Heidenreich A, Aus G, Bolla M, et al. EAU guidelines on prostate cancer. Eur Urol 2008; 53(1): 68-80.
  3. Loeb S, Vellekoop A, Ahmed HU, et al. Systematic review of complications of prostate biopsy. Eur Urol 2013; 64(6): 876-92.
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  5. Stattin P, Vickers AJ, Sjoberg DD, et al. Improving the Specificity of Screening for Lethal Prostate Cancer Using Prostate-specific Antigen and a Panel of Kallikrein Markers: A Nested Case-Control Study. Eur Urol 2015; 68(2): 207-13.
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  7. Voigt JD, Dong Y, Linder V, Zappala S. Use of the 4Kscore test to predict the risk of aggressive prostate cancer prior to prostate biopsy: Overall cost savings and improved quality of care to the us healthcare system. Rev Urol 2017; 19(1): 1-10.
  8. Govers TM, Caba L, Resnick MJ. Cost-Effectiveness of Urinary Biomarker Panel in Prostate Cancer Risk Assessment. The Journal of urology 2018; 200(6): 1221-6.
  9. Sanda MG, Feng Z, Howard DH, et al. Association Between Combined TMPRSS2:ERG and PCA3 RNA Urinary Testing and Detection of Aggressive Prostate Cancer. JAMA oncology 2017; 3(8): 1085-93.
  10. Tomlins SA, Day JR, Lonigro RJ, et al. Urine TMPRSS2:ERG Plus PCA3 for Individualized Prostate Cancer Risk Assessment. Eur Urol 2016; 70(1): 45-53.
  11. McKiernan J, Donovan MJ, O’Neill V, et al. A Novel Urine Exosome Gene Expression Assay to Predict High-grade Prostate Cancer at Initial Biopsy. JAMA oncology 2016; 2(7): 882-9.
  12. de la Taille A, Irani J, Graefen M, et al. Clinical evaluation of the PCA3 assay in guiding initial biopsy decisions. The Journal of urology 2011; 185(6): 2119-25.
  13. Aubry W, Lieberthal R, Willis A, Bagley G, Willis SM, 3rd, Layton A. Budget impact model: epigenetic assay can help avoid unnecessary repeated prostate biopsies and reduce healthcare spending. American health & drug benefits 2013; 6(1): 15-24.
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