Peabody John W, DeMaria Lisa M, Tamondong-Lachica Diana, Florentino Jhiedon, Czarina Acelajado M, Ouenes Othman, Richie Jerome P, Burgon Trever
QURE Healthcare, 450 Pacific Ave, Suite 200, San Francisco, CA, USA.
University of California, San Francisco, 500 Beale Street, San Francisco, CA, USA.
BMC Urol. 2017 Jul 3;17(1):51. doi: 10.1186/s12894-017-0243-1.
Of the more than 1.1 million men diagnosed worldwide annually with prostate cancer, the majority have indolent tumors. Distinguishing between aggressive and indolent cancer is an important clinical challenge. The current approaches for assessing tumor aggressiveness are recognized as insufficient. A validated protein-based assay has been shown to predict tumor aggressiveness from prostate biopsy. The main objective of this study was to measure the clinical utility of this new assay in the management of early-stage prostate cancer.
One hundred twenty nine board-certified urologists were asked to participate in a randomized, two-arm experiment. We collected data over 2 rounds using simulated clinical cases administered via an online platform. The cases were all newly diagnosed Gleason 3 + 3 or 3 + 4 prostate camcer patients. Urologists in the intervention arm received a 15-min webinar on this protein-based assay and given assay test results for their simulated patients in round 2. Each case had a preferred recommendation of either active surveillance or active treatment. The measured outcome was rate of preferred recommendation, defined as urologists who recommended the proper treatment course. Analyses were done using difference-in-difference estimations.
Using multinomial logistical regression, urologists who were given the assay results were significantly more likely to choose the preferred recommendation (active surveillance or active treatment) compared to controls (p = 0.004). These urologists were also significantly more likely to involve their patients in the treatment decision compared to controls (p = 0.001).
By providing additional information to inform the physician's treatment plan, a protein-based assay shows demonstrable clinical utility confirmed through a rigorous randomized controlled study design and regression analyses to test for effects.
全球每年有超过110万男性被诊断出患有前列腺癌,其中大多数患有惰性肿瘤。区分侵袭性癌和惰性癌是一项重要的临床挑战。目前评估肿瘤侵袭性的方法被认为是不够的。一种经过验证的基于蛋白质的检测方法已被证明可以从前列腺活检中预测肿瘤的侵袭性。本研究的主要目的是评估这种新检测方法在早期前列腺癌管理中的临床实用性。
邀请了129名获得委员会认证的泌尿科医生参与一项随机双臂实验。我们通过在线平台使用模拟临床病例在两轮中收集数据。这些病例均为新诊断的 Gleason 3 + 3或3 + 4前列腺癌患者。干预组的泌尿科医生参加了一个关于这种基于蛋白质检测方法的15分钟网络研讨会,并在第二轮中获得了他们模拟患者的检测结果。每个病例都有积极监测或积极治疗的首选建议。测量的结果是首选建议率,定义为推荐正确治疗方案的泌尿科医生。使用差异估计进行分析。
使用多项逻辑回归分析,与对照组相比,获得检测结果的泌尿科医生显著更有可能选择首选建议(积极监测或积极治疗)(p = 0.004)。与对照组相比,这些泌尿科医生也显著更有可能让患者参与治疗决策(p = 0.001)。
通过提供额外信息以指导医生的治疗计划,一种基于蛋白质的检测方法显示出了可证明的临床实用性,这通过严格的随机对照研究设计和回归分析来测试效果得到了证实。