Abstract
BackgroundRadiotherapy is an effective treatment for intermediate/high-risk locally-advanced prostate cancer, however, >30% of patients relapse within five years. Clinicopathological parameters currently fail to identify patients prone to systemic relapse and those whom treatment intensification may be beneficial. The purpose of this study was to independently validate the performance of a 70-gene Metastatic Assay in a cohort of diagnostic biopsies from patients treated with radical radiotherapy and androgen deprivation therapy (ADT).Patients & MethodsA bridging cohort of prostate cancer diagnostic biopsy specimens was profiled to enable optimization of the Metastatic Assay threshold prior to further independent clinical validation in a cohort of diagnostic biopsies from patients treated with radical radiotherapy and ADT. Multivariable Cox proportional hazard regression analysis was used to assess assay performance in predicting biochemical failure-free survival (BFFS) and metastasis-free survival (MFS).ResultsGene expression analysis was performed in 248 patients from the independent validation cohort and the Metastatic Assay applied. Ten year MFS was 72% for Metastatic Assay positive patients and 94% for Metastatic Assay negative patients (HR = 3.21, [1.35-7.67]; p=0.003). On multivariable analysis the Metastatic Assay remained predictive for development of distant metastases (HR = 2.71, [1.11-6.63]; p=0.030). The assay retained independent prognostic performance for MFS when assessed with the Cancer of the Prostate Assessment Score (CAPRA) (HR = 3.23 [1.22-8.59]; p=0.019) whilst CAPRA itself was not significant (HR = 1.88, [0.52–6.77]; p=0.332). A high concordance (100% [61.5-100]) for the assay result was noted between two separate foci taken from 11 tumours, whilst Gleason score had low concordance.ConclusionsThe Metastatic Assay demonstrated significant prognostic performance in patients treated with radical radiotherapy both alone and independent of standard clinical and pathological variables. The Metastatic Assay could have clinical utility when deciding upon treatment intensification in high-risk patients. Genomic and clinical data are available as a public resource.from Cancer via ola Kala on Inoreader http://ift.tt/2kCSA9n
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