Tang W H Wilson, Yimer Habte, Tummala Mohan, Shao Spencer, Chung Gina, Clement Jessica, Chu Bong Chul, Hubbell Earl, Kurtzman Kathryn N, Swanton Charles, Roberts Lewis R
Cleveland Clinic, Cleveland, OH, USA.
The U.S. Oncology Network, Tyler, TX, USA.
Prev Med. 2023 Feb;167:107384. doi: 10.1016/j.ypmed.2022.107384. Epub 2022 Dec 7.
Disparities in cancer screening and outcomes based on factors such as sex, socioeconomic status, and race and ethnicity in the United States are well documented. A blood-based multi-cancer early detection (MCED) test that detects a shared cancer signal across multiple cancer types and also predicts the cancer signal origin was developed and validated in the Circulating Cell-free Genome Atlas study (CCGA; NCT02889978). CCGA is a prospective, multicenter, case-control, observational study with longitudinal follow-up (overall N = 15,254). In this pre-specified, exploratory, descriptive analysis, test performance was evaluated among racial and ethnic groups. Overall, 4077 participants comprised the independent validation set with confirmed cancer status (cancer: n = 2823; non-cancer: n = 1254). Participants were stratified into the following racial/ethnic groups: Black (non-Hispanic), Hispanic (all races), Other (non-Hispanic), Other/unknown and White (non-Hispanic). Cancer and non-cancer participants were predominantly White (n = 2316, 82.0% and n = 996, 79.4%, respectively). Across groups, specificity for cancer signal detection ranged from 98.1% [n = 103; 95% CI: 93.2-99.5%] to 100% [n = 85; 95% CI: 95.7-100.0%]. The sensitivity for cancer signal detection across groups ranged from 43.9% [n = 57; 95% CI: 31.8-56.7%] to 63.0% [n = 192; 95% CI: 56.0-69.5%] and generally increased with clinical stage. The MCED test had consistently high specificity and similar sensitivity across racial and ethnic groups, though results are limited by sample size for some groups. Results support the broad applicability of this MCED test and clinical implementation on a population scale as a complement to standard screening.
在美国,基于性别、社会经济地位以及种族和民族等因素的癌症筛查和治疗结果差异已有充分记录。一种基于血液的多癌早期检测(MCED)测试在循环游离基因组图谱研究(CCGA;NCT02889978)中得以开发和验证,该测试可检测多种癌症类型中的共同癌症信号,并预测癌症信号的起源。CCGA是一项前瞻性、多中心、病例对照观察性研究,进行了纵向随访(总样本量N = 15254)。在这项预先设定的探索性描述性分析中,对不同种族和民族群体的测试性能进行了评估。总体而言,4077名参与者组成了具有确诊癌症状态的独立验证集(癌症患者:n = 2823;非癌症患者:n = 1254)。参与者被分为以下种族/民族群体:黑人(非西班牙裔)、西班牙裔(所有种族)、其他(非西班牙裔)、其他/未知以及白人(非西班牙裔)。癌症患者和非癌症患者中白人占比居多(分别为n = 2316,82.0%和n = 996,79.4%)。各群体中,癌症信号检测特异性范围为98.1%[n = 103;95%置信区间:93.2 - 99.5%]至100%[n = 85;95%置信区间:95.7 - 100.0%]。各群体中癌症信号检测灵敏度范围为43.9%[n = 57;95%置信区间:31.