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Prevalence of MRI lesions in men responding to a GP-led invitation for a prostate health check: a prospective cohort study

Authors :
Mieke Van Hemelrijck
Chris Brew-Graves
Neil McCartan
Louise Brown
Manuel Rodriguez-Justo
Aiman Haider
Alex Freeman
Mark Emberton
Kingshuk Pal
William Maynard
Aida Santaolalla
Nora Pashayan
Malcolm Mason
Tom Syer
Chris Parker
Caroline M Moore
Charlotte Bevan
Jayshireen Singh
Stuart Mackay-Thomas
Kate Walters
Mehul Mathukia
Charlotte Moss
David Sharpe
Kinnari Naik
Thomas Callender
Andrew Feber
Lee Berney
Anwar Padhani
Shonit Punwani
Hashim U Ahmed
Richard Kaplan
Teresa Marsden
Joanna Hadley
Steve Tuck
Saran Green
Ton Coolen
Elizabeth Isaac
Giorgio Brembilla
Douglas Kopcke
Francesco Giganti
Gerhardt Attard
Hina Pervez
Eric Aboagye
Elena Frangou
Fiona Gong
Louise C Brown
Aida Santa Olalla
Rosie Clow
Ged Corbett
Anna Wingate
Fatima Akbar
Suparna Thakali
Ashling Henderson
Dizem Tekin
Joey Clement
Harbit Sidhu
Teresita Beeston
Katerina Soteriou
Francesca Rawlins
Pirruntha Sivaharan
Savahnna Wolfe
Henry Tam
Heather Bholastewart
Sarp Keskin
Mariana Bertoncelli
Paul Boutros
Hayley Whitaker
Caroline Dive
Eytan Domany
Peter Parker
Andrew Prugia
Claire Chalmers-Watson
Alexander Gilkes
Dr Hira
Source :
BMJ Oncology, Vol 2, Iss 1 (2023)
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
BMJ Publishing Group, 2023.

Abstract

Objective In men with a raised prostate-specific antigen (PSA), MRI increases the detection of clinically significant cancer and reduces overdiagnosis, with fewer biopsies. MRI as a screening tool has not been assessed independently of PSA in a formal screening study. We report a systematic community-based assessment of the prevalence of prostate MRI lesions in an age-selected population.Methods and analysis Men aged 50–75 were identified from participating general practice (GP) practices and randomly selected for invitation to a screening MRI and PSA. Men with a positive MRI or a raised PSA density (≥0.12 ng/mL2) were recommended for standard National Health Service (NHS) prostate cancer assessment.Results Eight GP practices sent invitations to 2096 men. 457 men (22%) responded and 303 completed both screening tests. Older white men were most likely to respond to the invitation, with black men having 20% of the acceptance rate of white men.One in six men (48/303 men, 16%) had a positive screening MRI, and an additional 1 in 20 men (16/303, 5%) had a raised PSA density alone. After NHS assessment, 29 men (9.6%) were diagnosed with clinically significant cancer and 3 men (1%) with clinically insignificant cancer.Two in three men with a positive MRI, and more than half of men with clinically significant disease had a PSA

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
27527948
Volume :
2
Issue :
1
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
BMJ Oncology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.9e67b1d6c59a4ab9a2b0588957b411c1
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1136/bmjonc-2023-000057