Incorporating multiparametric MRI staging and the new histological Grade Group system improves risk-stratified detection of bone metastasis in prostate cancer
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Authors
Hsu, Ray
Chetan, M
Lophatananon, A
Hubbard, R
Publication Date
2016-11-22Journal Title
British Journal of Cancer
ISSN
0007-0920
Publisher
Nature Publishing Group
Volume
115
Issue
11
Pages
1285-1288
Language
English
Type
Article
This Version
AM
Metadata
Show full item recordCitation
Thurtle, D., Hsu, R., Chetan, M., Lophatananon, A., Hubbard, R., Gnanapragasam, V., & Barrett, T. (2016). Incorporating multiparametric MRI staging and the new histological Grade Group system improves risk-stratified detection of bone metastasis in prostate cancer. British Journal of Cancer, 115 (11), 1285-1288. https://doi.org/10.1038/bjc.2016.353
Abstract
$\textbf{BACKGROUND}$: There remains uncertainty on the need for bone staging in men with intermediate-risk prostate cancer. Current guidelines do not use mpMRI-staging information and rely on historic pathology grading.
$\textbf{METHODS}$: We investigated the ability of mpMRI and the new Grade Group system to better predict bone metastasis status in a retrospective cohort study of 438 men with prostate cancer undergoing baseline mpMRI and isotope bone scintigraphy (BS).
$\textbf{RESULTS}$: Including mpMRI-staging information significantly increased the specificity of bone metastasis detection from 3.0% to 24.2% (P<0.01) and sensitivity from 89.2% to 97.3%. The new Grade Group score demonstrated progressive increase in bone metastasis rates (P<0.001). A novel risk-stratification model combining Grade Groups, PSA and mpMRI staging shows promise in predicting bone metastasis and could potentially reduce BS usage by 22.4%-34.7%.
$\textbf{CONCLUSIONS}$: Incorporating the new Grade Group system and mpMRI staging more accurately identified bone metastatic risk and suggests men with Grade Group ⩽2 and/or without radiological T3 disease could safely avoid routine bone staging.
Keywords
prostate cancer, bone scintigraphy, tumour staging, MRI, osseous metastasis, risk stratification
Sponsorship
We thank research support from the National Institute of Health Research, Cambridge Biomedical Research Centre, Cancer Research UK, Cancer Research UK and the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council Imaging Centre in Cambridge and Manchester and the Cambridge Experimental Cancer Medicine Centre.
Identifiers
External DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/bjc.2016.353
This record's URL: https://www.repository.cam.ac.uk/handle/1810/261458
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