RecruitingNCT06637267

Prospective Evaluation of Proclarix® Test to Improve Risk Stratification in Men Scheduled for MpMRI and Prostate Biopsy in Cantonal Hospital Aarau


Sponsor

Kantonsspital Aarau

Enrollment

480 participants

Start Date

Aug 24, 2022

Study Type

OBSERVATIONAL

Conditions

Summary

The use of prostate-specific antigen (PSA) for the screening of prostate cancer has led to higher detection rates and a shift to lower and therefore potentially more curative disease stages at diagnosis and thus subsequently to a lower mortality. A suspicious digital rectal examination of the prostate or an increased PSA value are suspicious for PCa and indicate a confirmatory prostate biopsy . Almost 25% of all men report moderate to severe pain after the biopsy. Serious complications such as urosepsis requiring intensive medical monitoring are less common. There are also other predictors for the presence of prostate cancer: including positive family history in first-degree relatives, low PSA-ratio (= ratio between free to total PSA), older age and African-American race. In order to reduce the number of unnecessary prostate biopsies, numerous prostate-cancer risk calculators based on these predictors have been designed. Risk-calculators serve as an aid to clinical decision-making. For example, if the calculated risk of prostate cancer is low, a PSA follow-up can be a viable alternative to prostate biopsy. However, these risk calculators often have some shortcomings. The two most frequently used calculators are based on cohorts of men in whom the biopsies were performed as part of a study protocol regardless of the clinical context. These cohorts do not realistically represent the collective of patients to whom a prostate biopsy is indicated. Furthermore, the cohorts of these calculators are mostly very old and do not take into account the technical developments with improved sensitivity/specificity in recent years. Nowadays, a multiparametric magnetic resonance imaging (mpMRI) of the prostate is being performed and suspicious areas in the prostate are explicitly targeted, leading to an improved detection of significant carcinoma.The possibility of determining novel laboratory predictors such as biomarkers has been lately under investigation. All of these biomarkers are not included in the currently available risk calculators or are poorly validated. A pathological grading system, the so-called Gleason score, is a pathological grading system differentiating between less versus more aggressive prostate cancer cells. The most frequently used risk calculators have been developed based on patient cohorts that were created at a time before the Gleason score was revised to its current status. Thus, many previously low-grade carcinomas would be classified as more aggressive ones according to current pathology guidelines. Based on these circumstances, the development of a new PCa risk stratification models is of major clinical importance. In addition, as all biomarker measurements rely heavily on analytical performance of laboratory equipment, the quality assurance is an important factor and should be under scrutiny, especially when new biomarkers are under investigation. Proclarix is a CE-marked test based on two new biomarkers, Thrombospondin 1 (THBS1) and Cathepsin D (CTSD), combined with PSA values and the patient's age. A software algorithm returns a risk assessment that can be utilized to predict clinically significant PCa (ISUP group 2 or higher).


Eligibility

Sex: MALEMin Age: 45 YearsMax Age: 80 Years

Plain Language Summary

Simplified for easier understanding

This study evaluates whether the Proclarix® blood test can improve how doctors assess the risk of prostate cancer in men who are scheduled for a prostate MRI and biopsy. The test combines PSA with other blood markers to help determine who truly needs a biopsy. **You may be eligible if...** - You are a male patient between 45 and 80 years old - You are already scheduled for a prostate MRI followed by a biopsy as part of your standard care at Cantonal Hospital Aarau - You have signed the informed consent form **You may NOT be eligible if...** - You have had prior prostate treatments (surgery, radiation, HIFU, cryotherapy, alcohol injection) in the past 5 years - You currently have an active urinary tract infection - You are taking 5-alpha-reductase inhibitors (like finasteride or dutasteride) - Your MRI was performed at a different hospital outside of Kantonsspital Aarau Talk to your doctor to see if this trial is right for you.

This summary was AI-generated to explain the trial in plain language. It is not medical advice. Always discuss eligibility with your doctor before enrolling in a clinical trial.

Interested in this trial?

Get notified about updates and connect with the research team.

Interventions

DIAGNOSTIC_TESTProclarix®

The aim of the study is the implementation of new biomarkers (Proclarix®) in order to increase the sensitivity and specificity of PSA-based Prostate cancer early detection avoiding unnecessary prostate biopsies thus decreasing the associated morbidity (infections, bleeding, urinary retention, etc.). PSA values, Proclarix and mpMRI findings will be correlated with the results of the prostate biopsy in order to improve patient selection for future biopsies in order to avoid unnecessary prostate biopsies, but still be able to detect relevant carcinomas at an early stage. The null hypothesis in our observational study is the lack of superiority in PCa early detection when using the Proclarix over PSA alone.


Locations(1)

Cantonal Hospital Aarau

Aarau, Canton of Aargau, Switzerland

View Full Details on ClinicalTrials.gov

For the most up-to-date information, visit the official listing.

Visit

NCT06637267


Related Trials