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Development and Multicenter Case-Control Validation of Urinary Comprehensive Genomic Profiling for Urothelial Carcinoma Diagnosis, Surveillance, and Risk-Prediction.

Authors :
Salari K
Sundi D
Lee JJ
Wu S
Wu CL
DiFiore G
Yan QR
Pienkny A
Lee CK
Oberlin D
Barme G
Piser J
Kahn R
Collins E
Phillips KG
Caruso VM
Goudarzi M
Garcia-Ransom M
Lentz PS
Evans-Holm ME
MacBride AR
Fischer DS
Haddadzadeh IJ
Mazzarella BC
Gray JW
Koppie TM
Bicocca VT
Levin TG
Lotan Y
Feldman AS
Source :
Clinical cancer research : an official journal of the American Association for Cancer Research [Clin Cancer Res] 2023 Sep 15; Vol. 29 (18), pp. 3668-3680.
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Purpose: Urinary comprehensive genomic profiling (uCGP) uses next-generation sequencing to identify mutations associated with urothelial carcinoma and has the potential to improve patient outcomes by noninvasively diagnosing disease, predicting grade and stage, and estimating recurrence risk.<br />Experimental Design: This is a multicenter case-control study using banked urine specimens collected from patients undergoing initial diagnosis/hematuria workup or urothelial carcinoma surveillance. A total of 581 samples were analyzed by uCGP: 333 for disease classification and grading algorithm development, and 248 for blinded validation. uCGP testing was done using the UroAmp platform, which identifies five classes of mutation: single-nucleotide variants, copy-number variants, small insertion-deletions, copy-neutral loss of heterozygosity, and aneuploidy. UroAmp algorithms predicting urothelial carcinoma tumor presence, grade, and recurrence risk were compared with cytology, cystoscopy, and pathology.<br />Results: uCGP algorithms had a validation sensitivity/specificity of 95%/90% for initial cancer diagnosis in patients with hematuria and demonstrated a negative predictive value (NPV) of 99%. A positive diagnostic likelihood ratio (DLR) of 9.2 and a negative DLR of 0.05 demonstrate the ability to risk-stratify patients presenting with hematuria. In surveillance patients, binary urothelial carcinoma classification demonstrated an NPV of 91%. uCGP recurrence-risk prediction significantly prognosticated future recurrence (hazard ratio, 6.2), whereas clinical risk factors did not. uCGP demonstrated positive predictive value (PPV) comparable with cytology (45% vs. 42%) with much higher sensitivity (79% vs. 25%). Finally, molecular grade predictions had a PPV of 88% and a specificity of 95%.<br />Conclusions: uCGP enables noninvasive, accurate urothelial carcinoma diagnosis and risk stratification in both hematuria and urothelial carcinoma surveillance patients.<br /> (©2023 The Authors; Published by the American Association for Cancer Research.)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1557-3265
Volume :
29
Issue :
18
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Clinical cancer research : an official journal of the American Association for Cancer Research
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
37439796
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1158/1078-0432.CCR-23-0570