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Role of Magnetic Resonance Imaging in Prostate Cancer Screening: A Pilot Study Within the Göteborg Randomised Screening Trial.

Authors :
Grenabo Bergdahl A
Wilderäng U
Aus G
Carlsson S
Damber JE
Frånlund M
Geterud K
Khatami A
Socratous A
Stranne J
Hellström M
Hugosson J
Source :
European urology [Eur Urol] 2016 Oct; Vol. 70 (4), pp. 566-573. Date of Electronic Publication: 2015 Dec 24.
Publication Year :
2016

Abstract

Background: Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and targeted biopsies (TB) have shown potential to more accurately detect significant prostate cancer compared with prostate-specific antigen (PSA) and systematic biopsies (SB).<br />Objective: To compare sequential screening (PSA+MRI) with conventional PSA screening.<br />Design, Setting, and Participants: Of 384 attendees in the 10th screening round of the Göteborg randomised screening trial, 124 men, median age 69.5 yr, had a PSA of ≥ 1.8 ng/ml and underwent a prebiopsy MRI. Men with suspicious lesions on MRI and/or PSA ≥ 3.0ng/ml were referred for biopsy. SB was performed blinded to MRI results and TB was performed in men with tumour-suspicious findings on MRI. Three screening strategies were compared (PSA ≥ 3.0+SB; PSA ≥ 3.0+MRI+TB and PSA ≥ 1.8+MRI+TB).<br />Outcome Measurements and Statistical Analysis: Cancer detection rates, sensitivity, and specificity were calculated per screening strategy and compared using McNemar's test.<br />Results and Limitations: In total, 28 cases of prostate cancer were detected, of which 20 were diagnosed in biopsy-naïve men. Both PSA ≥ 3.0+MRI and PSA ≥ 1.8+MRI significantly increased specificity compared with PSA ≥ 3.0+SB (0.92 and 0.79 vs 0.52; p<0.002 for both), while sensitivity was significantly higher for PSA ≥ 1.8+MRI compared with PSA ≥ 3.0+MRI (0.73 vs 0.46, p=0.008). The detection rate of significant cancer was higher with PSA ≥ 1.8+MRI compared with PSA ≥ 3.0+SB (5.9% vs 4.0%), while the detection rate of insignificant cancer was lowered by PSA ≥ 3.0+MRI (0.3% vs 1.2%). The primary limitation of this study is the small sample of men.<br />Conclusion: A screening strategy with a lowered PSA cut-off followed by TB in MRI-positive men seems to increase the detection of significant cancers while improving specificity. If replicated, these results may contribute to a paradigm shift in future screening.<br />Patient Summary: Major concerns in prostate-specific antigen screening are overdiagnosis and underdiagnosis. We evaluated whether prostate magnetic resonance imaging could improve the balance of benefits to harm in prostate cancer screening screening, and we found a promising potential of using magnetic resonance imaging in addition to prostate-specific antigen.<br /> (Copyright © 2015 European Association of Urology. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1873-7560
Volume :
70
Issue :
4
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
European urology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
26724840
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.eururo.2015.12.006