Genetically adjusted PSA levels for prostate cancer screening
过度诊断
前列腺癌
医学
前列腺特异性抗原
前列腺
肿瘤科
癌症
内科学
前列腺癌筛查
妇科
作者
Linda Kachuri,Thomas J. Hoffmann,Yu Jiang,Sonja I. Berndt,John P. Shelley,Kerry Schaffer,Mitchell J. Machiela,Neal D. Freedman,Wen‐Yi Huang,Shengchao A. Li,Ryder Easterlin,Phyllis J. Goodman,Cathee Till,Ian M. Thompson,Hans Lilja,Stephen K. Van Den Eeden,Stephen J. Chanock,Christopher A. Haiman,David V. Conti,Robert J. Klein,Jonathan D. Mosley,Rebecca E. Graff,John S. Witte
出处
期刊:Nature Medicine [Springer Nature] 日期:2023-06-01卷期号:29 (6): 1412-1423被引量:19
Abstract Prostate-specific antigen (PSA) screening for prostate cancer remains controversial because it increases overdiagnosis and overtreatment of clinically insignificant tumors. Accounting for genetic determinants of constitutive, non-cancer-related PSA variation has potential to improve screening utility. In this study, we discovered 128 genome-wide significant associations ( P < 5 × 10 −8 ) in a multi-ancestry meta-analysis of 95,768 men and developed a PSA polygenic score (PGS PSA ) that explains 9.61% of constitutive PSA variation. We found that, in men of European ancestry, using PGS-adjusted PSA would avoid up to 31% of negative prostate biopsies but also result in 12% fewer biopsies in patients with prostate cancer, mostly with Gleason score <7 tumors. Genetically adjusted PSA was more predictive of aggressive prostate cancer (odds ratio (OR) = 3.44, P = 6.2 × 10 −14 , area under the curve (AUC) = 0.755) than unadjusted PSA (OR = 3.31, P = 1.1 × 10 −12 , AUC = 0.738) in 106 cases and 23,667 controls. Compared to a prostate cancer PGS alone (AUC = 0.712), including genetically adjusted PSA improved detection of aggressive disease (AUC = 0.786, P = 7.2 × 10 −4 ). Our findings highlight the potential utility of incorporating PGS for personalized biomarkers in prostate cancer screening.