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Predicting the risk of prostate cancer in asymptomatic men: a cohort study to develop and validate a novel algorithm

Abstract:
Background: Diagnosis of prostate cancer at an early stage can potentially identify tumours when intervention may improve treatment options and survival.Aim: To develop and validate an equation to predict absolute risk of prostate cancer in asymptomatic men with prostate specific antigen (PSA) tests in primary care.Design and setting: Cohort study using data from English general practices, held in the QResearch database.Method: Routine data were collected from 1098 QResearch English general practices linked to mortality, hospital, and cancer records for model development. Two separate sets of practices were used for validation. In total, there were 844 455 men aged 25–84 years with PSA tests recorded who were free of prostate cancer at baseline in the derivation cohort; the validation cohorts comprised 292 084 and 316 583 men. The primary outcome was incident prostate cancer. Cox proportional hazards models were used to derive 10-year risk equations. Measures of performance were determined in both validation cohorts.Results: There were 40 821 incident cases of prostate cancer in the derivation cohort. The risk equation included PSA level, age, deprivation, ethnicity, smoking status, serious mental illness, diabetes, BMI, and family history of prostate cancer. The risk equation explained 70.4% (95% CI = 69.2 to 71.6) of the variation in time to diagnosis of prostate cancer (R2) (D statistic 3.15, 95% CI = 3.06 to 3.25; Harrell’s C-index 0.917, 95% CI = 0.915 to 0.919). Two-step approach had higher sensitivity than a fixed PSA threshold at identifying prostate cancer cases (identifying 68.2% versus 43.9% of cases), high-grade cancers (49.2% versus 40.3%), and deaths (67.0% versus 31.5%).Conclusion: The risk equation provided valid measures of absolute risk and had higher sensitivity for incident prostate cancer, high-grade cancers, and prostate cancer mortality than a simple approach based on age and PSA threshold
Publication status:
Published
Peer review status:
Peer reviewed

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Publisher copy:
10.3399/bjgp20x714137

Authors

More by this author
Institution:
University of Oxford
Role:
Author
ORCID:
0000-0002-2479-7283
More by this author
Institution:
University of Oxford
Role:
Author
ORCID:
0000-0002-2327-3306


Publisher:
Royal College of General Practitioners
Journal:
British Journal of General Practice More from this journal
Volume:
71
Issue:
706
Pages:
e364-e371
Publication date:
2020-12-09
DOI:
EISSN:
1478-5242
ISSN:
0960-1643


Language:
English
Keywords:
Pubs id:
1178952
Local pid:
pubs:1178952
Source identifiers:
W3111062075
Deposit date:
2026-03-24
ARK identifier:
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