A calculator to help men
and their doctors assess their risk of prostate cancer, developed at the UT
Health Science Center, has had a major upgrade to enhance how men and their
physicians better understand a man's risk of prostate cancer. A description of
the update's needs and benefits is described by the Health Science Center
authors in a viewpoint published online Monday, August 4, 2014 in the Journal
of the American Medical Association.
"The prostate cancer
risk calculator has been updated using current risk factors and a better
interface; the current version gives a more nuanced result that helps
understand a man's risk of prostate cancer," said Ian M. Thompson Jr.,
M.D., director of the Cancer Therapy & Research Center at the UT Health
Science Center, who helped develop the risk calculator and co-authored a
commentary published today in the Journal of the American Medical
Association.
The free calculator on
the Health Science Center website (http://deb.uthscsa.edu/URORiskCalc/Pages/calcs.jsp
) takes just minutes to use and gives a man more information about his risk for
both low-grade prostate cancer, which may never require treatment, and high-grade
prostate cancer. It provides an "emoji" graphic readout that puts the
numeric percentages into a visual perspective. Significantly, it also gives the
possibility in numbers (and emojis) that he may have no prostate cancer at all.
"What is important are
the three numbers," Dr. Thompson said. "For doctors, it makes for a
more challenging conversation with the patient. For the patient, it gives him
better information so he can decide how he wants to move forward."
The primary purpose of
assessing prostate cancer risk is detection of high-grade, high risk cancers.
"The prostate cancers you want to find are the high-grade cancers,"
Dr. Thompson said, "because then we can take action to prolong and even
save a man's life."
"On the other hand,
in some men, a prostate biopsy will far more commonly find a low-grade cancer.
These cancers have such a low risk that many men who take the time to fully
understand the options, decide to simply monitor them", says Dr. Thompson.
"For many men who have been diagnosed with these low-risk cancers, they
wish they'd known about that before they had a prostate biopsy; many, in
retrospect wish they'd not had a biopsy in the first place. This new risk
calculator helps them understand that risk in advance."
The risk calculator is
based on data from the 18,882-man National Cancer Institute's Prostate Cancer
Prevention Trial (PCPT), a national multi-site study of which Dr. Thompson was
original principal investigator. The first risk calculator was made available
in 2006, but Dr. Thompson said as screening and treatment affects more and more
of the population, it changes the risk factors that affect the calculations.
The CTRC scientific team has continued to update the calculator since 2006.
"The new calculator
should provide a more accurate prediction of the outcome that a man would
expect on biopsy because it incorporates a substantially larger amount of
patient data than the original calculator," said Donna Ankerst, Ph.D.,
research professor of urology at the Health Science Center and professor of
mathematics at the Technical University in Munich, who helped develop the
calculator. "It also uses an advanced statistical model to distinguish the
prediction of low-grade and high-grade disease."
Along with building on
the knowledge that continues to come from data in the Prostate Cancer
Prevention Trial, the new calculator also incorporates data from a separate
study conducted by Dr. Thompson. That study, called San Antonio Center of
Biomarkers Of Risk for Prostate Cancer (SABOR) gave the researchers a new
biomarker called percent-free PSA.
"Step by step, we
are assembling the tools to help men work with their doctors to make
better-informed decisions about their treatment," Dr. Thompson said.
"And, as steps go, this is a big one."
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