1. Interim Results from the IMPACT Study: Evidence for Prostate-specific Antigen Screening in BRCA2 Mutation Carriers
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Elizabeth C, Page, Elizabeth K, Bancroft, Mark N, Brook, Melissa, Assel, Mona, Hassan Al Battat, Sarah, Thomas, Natalie, Taylor, Anthony, Chamberlain, Jennifer, Pope, Holly Ni, Raghallaigh, D Gareth, Evans, Jeanette, Rothwell, Lovise, Maehle, Eli Marie, Grindedal, Paul, James, Lyon, Mascarenhas, Joanne, McKinley, Lucy, Side, Tessy, Thomas, Christi, van Asperen, Hans, Vasen, Lambertus A, Kiemeney, Janneke, Ringelberg, Thomas Dyrsø, Jensen, Palle J S, Osther, Brian T, Helfand, Elena, Genova, Rogier A, Oldenburg, Cezary, Cybulski, Dominika, Wokolorczyk, Kai-Ren, Ong, Camilla, Huber, Jimmy, Lam, Louise, Taylor, Monica, Salinas, Lidia, Feliubadaló, Jan C, Oosterwijk, Wendy, van Zelst-Stams, Jackie, Cook, Derek J, Rosario, Susan, Domchek, Jacquelyn, Powers, Saundra, Buys, Karen, O'Toole, Margreet G E M, Ausems, Rita K, Schmutzler, Kerstin, Rhiem, Louise, Izatt, Vishakha, Tripathi, Manuel R, Teixeira, Marta, Cardoso, William D, Foulkes, Armen, Aprikian, Heleen, van Randeraad, Rosemarie, Davidson, Mark, Longmuir, Mariëlle W G, Ruijs, Apollonia T J M, Helderman van den Enden, Muriel, Adank, Rachel, Williams, Lesley, Andrews, Declan G, Murphy, Dorothy, Halliday, Lisa, Walker, Annelie, Liljegren, Stefan, Carlsson, Ashraf, Azzabi, Irene, Jobson, Catherine, Morton, Kylie, Shackleton, Katie, Snape, Helen, Hanson, Marion, Harris, Marc, Tischkowitz, Amy, Taylor, Judy, Kirk, Rachel, Susman, Rakefet, Chen-Shtoyerman, Allan, Spigelman, Nicholas, Pachter, Munaza, Ahmed, Teresa, Ramon Y Cajal, Janez, Zgajnar, Carole, Brewer, Neus, Gadea, Angela F, Brady, Theo, van Os, David, Gallagher, Oskar, Johannsson, Alan, Donaldson, Julian, Barwell, Nicola, Nicolai, Eitan, Friedman, Elias, Obeid, Lynn, Greenhalgh, Vedang, Murthy, Lucia, Copakova, Sibel, Saya, John, McGrath, Peter, Cooke, Karina, Rønlund, Kate, Richardson, Alex, Henderson, Soo H, Teo, Banu, Arun, Karin, Kast, Alexander, Dias, Neil K, Aaronson, Audrey, Ardern-Jones, Chris H, Bangma, Elena, Castro, David, Dearnaley, Diana M, Eccles, Karen, Tricker, Jorunn, Eyfjord, Alison, Falconer, Christopher, Foster, Henrik, Gronberg, Freddie C, Hamdy, Vigdis, Stefansdottir, Vincent, Khoo, Geoffrey J, Lindeman, Jan, Lubinski, Karol, Axcrona, Christos, Mikropoulos, Anita, Mitra, Clare, Moynihan, Gadi, Rennert, Mohnish, Suri, Penny, Wilson, Tim, Dudderidge, Judith, Offman, Zsofia, Kote-Jarai, Andrew, Vickers, Hans, Lilja, Rosalind A, Eeles, Læknadeild (HÍ), Faculty of Medicine (UI), Heilbrigðisvísindasvið (HÍ), School of Health Sciences (UI), Háskóli Íslands, and University of Iceland
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Adult ,Male ,Prostate cancer ,Gen ,Targeted prostate screening ,Genetic Carrier Screening ,Urology ,Genes, BRCA2 ,Genes, BRCA1 ,Prostatic Neoplasms ,Blöðruhálskirtilskrabbamein ,Middle Aged ,Prostate-Specific Antigen ,BRCA1 ,BRCA2 ,Prostate-specific-antigen ,Humans ,Kallikreins ,Prospective Studies ,Þvagfærasjúkdómar ,Early Detection of Cancer ,Germ-Line Mutation ,Aged - Abstract
Publisher's version (útgefin grein)., Background: Mutations in BRCA2 cause a higher risk of early-onset aggressive prostate cancer (PrCa). The IMPACT study is evaluating targeted PrCa screening using prostate-specific-antigen (PSA) in men with germline BRCA1/2 mutations. Objective: To report the utility of PSA screening, PrCa incidence, positive predictive value of PSA, biopsy, and tumour characteristics after 3 yr of screening, by BRCA status. Design, setting, and participants: Men aged 40–69 yr with a germline pathogenic BRCA1/2 mutation and male controls testing negative for a familial BRCA1/2 mutation were recruited. Participants underwent PSA screening for 3 yr, and if PSA > 3.0 ng/ml, men were offered prostate biopsy. Outcome measurements and statistical analysis: PSA levels, PrCa incidence, and tumour characteristics were evaluated. Statistical analyses included Poisson regression offset by person-year follow-up, chi-square tests for proportion t tests for means, and Kruskal-Wallis for medians. Results and limitations: A total of 3027 patients (2932 unique individuals) were recruited (919 BRCA1 carriers, 709 BRCA1 noncarriers, 902 BRCA2 carriers, and 497 BRCA2 noncarriers). After 3 yr of screening, 527 men had PSA > 3.0 ng/ml, 357 biopsies were performed, and 112 PrCa cases were diagnosed (31 BRCA1 carriers, 19 BRCA1 noncarriers, 47 BRCA2 carriers, and 15 BRCA2 noncarriers). Higher compliance with biopsy was observed in BRCA2 carriers compared with noncarriers (73% vs 60%). Cancer incidence rate per 1000 person years was higher in BRCA2 carriers than in noncarriers (19.4 vs 12.0; p = 0.03); BRCA2 carriers were diagnosed at a younger age (61 vs 64 yr; p = 0.04) and were more likely to have clinically significant disease than BRCA2 noncarriers (77% vs 40%; p = 0.01). No differences in age or tumour characteristics were detected between BRCA1 carriers and BRCA1 noncarriers. The 4 kallikrein marker model discriminated better (area under the curve [AUC] = 0.73) for clinically significant cancer at biopsy than PSA alone (AUC = 0.65). Conclusions: After 3 yr of screening, compared with noncarriers, BRCA2 mutation carriers were associated with a higher incidence of PrCa, younger age of diagnosis, and clinically significant tumours. Therefore, systematic PSA screening is indicated for men with a BRCA2 mutation. Further follow-up is required to assess the role of screening in BRCA1 mutation carriers. Patient summary: We demonstrate that after 3 yr of prostate-specific antigen (PSA) testing, we detect more serious prostate cancers in men with BRCA2 mutations than in those without these mutations. We recommend that male BRCA2 carriers are offered systematic PSA screening. © 2019 The Authors We demonstrate that after 3 yr of prostate-specific-antigen (PSA) testing, we detect more serious prostate cancers in men with BRCA2 mutations than those without these mutations. We recommend that male BRCA2 carriers are offered systematic PSA screening., We demonstrate that, after four annual PSA screening rounds, BRCA2 mutation carriers have a higher incidence of PrCa, are diagnosed at a younger age, and present with more clinically significant tumours than BRCA2 noncarriers. Further follow-up is required to assess the role of screening in BRCA1 mutation carriers. Therefore, these data support the use of systematic PSA screening in male BRCA2 carriers. Author contributions : Rosalind A. Eeles had full access to all the data in the study and takes responsibility for the integrity of the data and the accuracy of the data analysis. Study concept and design : Aaronson, Ardern-Jones, Bancroft, Bangma, Castro, Dearnaley, Eccles, Evans, Eyfjord, Falconer, Foster, Gronberg, Hamdy, Johannsson, Khoo, Kote-Jarai, Lilja, Lindeman, Lubinski, Mahle, Mikropoulos, Mitra, Moynihan, Page, Rennert, Suri. Acquisition of data: All authors. Analysis and interpretation of data: All authors. Drafting of the manuscript: All authors. Critical revision of the manuscript for important intellectual content: All authors. Statistical analysis : Page, Bancroft, Brook, Assel, Vickers, Lilja. Obtaining funding : Eeles and all IMPACT collaborating sites obtained their own funding for running the study at their site. Administrative, technical, or material support: All authors. Supervision: Eeles. Other : None. Financial disclosures: Rosalind A. Eeles certifies that all conflicts of interest, including specific financial interests and relationships and affiliations relevant to the subject matter or materials discussed in the manuscript (eg, employment/affiliation, grants or funding, consultancies, honoraria, stock ownership or options, expert testimony, royalties, or patents filed, received, or pending), are the following: Hans Lilja holds patents for intact PSA assays, and is named, along with Andrew J. Vickers, on a patent application for a statistical method to detect prostate cancer. The patents have been licensed and commercialised as the 4 Kscore by OPKO Health. Drs. Vickers and Lilja receive royalties from sales of this test. Additionally, Dr. Lilja owns stock and Dr. Vickers owns stock options in OPKO. Professor Rosalind Eeles: Royal Marsden Hospital—Nov 2017; support from Janssen; honorarium as speaker £1100; University of Chicago invited talk May 2018; honorarium as speaker Rosalind A. Eeles certifies that all conflicts of interest, including specific financial interests and relationships and affiliations relevant to the subject matter or materials discussed in the manuscript (eg, employment/affiliation, grants or funding, consultancies, honoraria, stock ownership or options, expert testimony, royalties, or patents filed, received, or pending), are the following: Hans Lilja holds patents for intact PSA assays, and is named, along with Andrew J. Vickers, on a patent application for a statistical method to detect prostate cancer. The patents have been licensed and commercialised as the 4 Kscore by OPKO Health. Drs. Vickers and Lilja receive royalties from sales of this test. Additionally, Dr. Lilja owns stock and Dr. Vickers owns stock options in OPKO. Professor Rosalind Eeles: Royal Marsden Hospital—Nov 2017; support from Janssen; honorarium as speaker £1100; University of Chicago invited talk May 2018; honorarium as speaker $1000. The remaining authors have no other conflict of interest to declare.000. The remaining authors have no other conflict of interest to declare. Funding/Support and role of the sponsor : This research is coordinated by the Institute of Cancer Research, London, UK, and is supported by grants from Cancer Research UK (grant references C5047/A21332, C5047/A13232, and C5047/A17528) and the Ronald and Rita McAulay Foundation. Judith Offman is supported by Cancer Research UK Programme Grant reference C8161/A16892. Mr. and Mrs. Jack Baker are acknowledged for supporting the study in NorthShore University HealthSystem, Evanston, IL, USA and Myriad Genetics Laboratory, Salt Lake City, UT, USA, for providing research BRCA testing rates for NorthShore University HealthSystem patients. We acknowledge funding from the National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) to the Biomedical Research Center at the Institute of Cancer Research and the Royal Marsden NHS Foundation Trust, at Manchester University Foundation Trust (IS-BRC-1215-20007), the Oxford Biomedical Research Centre Program, and the Cambridge Clinical Research Centre, NIHR Cambridge Biomedical Research Centre. We acknowledge that in Australia, this project was cofunded by Cancer Council Tasmania and Cancer Australia (grant number 1006349 [2011–2013]), Prostate Cancer Foundation of Australia (grant number PCFA PRO4 [2008]), Cancer Councils of Victoria and South Australia (grant number 400048 [2006–2008]), the Victorian Cancer Agency Clinical Trial Capacity CTCB08_14, Cancer Australia and Prostate Cancer Foundation of Australia (2014–2016; grant number 1059423), and Translational grants EOI09_50. The Association of International Cancer Research funded data collection in The Netherlands (AICR 10-0596). We acknowledge funding from the Basser Center for BRCA (to Susan Domchek). This work was supported in part by the National Institutes of Health/National Cancer Institute (NIH/NCI) with a Cancer Center Support Grant to Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center (P30 CA008748), a SPORE grant in Prostate Cancer to Dr. H. Scher (P50-CA92629), the Sidney Kimmel Center for Prostate and Urologic Cancers, David H. Koch through the Prostate Cancer Foundation. This work was also supported in part by the NIHR Oxford Biomedical Research Centre Program in UK, the Swedish Cancer Society (CAN 2017/559), the Swedish Research Council (VR-MH project no. 2016-02974), and General Hospital in Malmö Foundation for Combating Cancer. We acknowledge funding from the Slovenian Research Agency, Research programme P3-0352. We thank CERCA Program/Generalitat de Catalunya for their institutional support. Elena Castro acknowledges funding from Prostate Cancer Foundation. We acknowledge the support of the Asociación Española Contra el Cáncer (AECC), the Instituto de Salud Carlos III (organismo adscrito al Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad), “Fondo Europeo de Desarrollo Regional (FEDER), una manera de hacer Europa” (PI10/01422, PI13/00285, PIE13/00022, PI16/00563, JR18/00011 and CIBERONC), and the Institut Català de la Salut and Autonomous Government of Catalonia (2009SGR290, 2014SGR338 and PERIS Project MedPerCan). We acknowledge funding support from Fundação para a Ciência e a Tecnologia to the IPO Porto study (project grant PTDC/DTP-PIC/1308/2014 to Manuel R. Teixeira and fellowship grant SFRH/BD/116557/2016 to Marta Cardoso).
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- 2019