CanRisk-Prostate: A Comprehensive, Externally Validated Risk Model for the Prediction of Future Prostate Cancer

Author:

Nyberg Tommy12ORCID,Brook Mark N.3ORCID,Ficorella Lorenzo1,Lee Andrew1ORCID,Dennis Joe1,Yang Xin1ORCID,Wilcox Naomi1ORCID,Dadaev Tokhir3ORCID,Govindasami Koveela3,Lush Michael1,Leslie Goska1ORCID,Lophatananon Artitaya4,Muir Kenneth4,Bancroft Elizabeth35ORCID,Easton Douglas F.1ORCID,Tischkowitz Marc6ORCID,Kote-Jarai Zsofia3ORCID,Eeles Rosalind35,Antoniou Antonis C.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Centre for Cancer Genetic Epidemiology, Department of Public Health and Primary Care, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, United Kingdom

2. MRC Biostatistics Unit, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, United Kingdom

3. Oncogenetics Team, Division of Genetics and Epidemiology, The Institute of Cancer Research, London, United Kingdom

4. Division of Population Health, Health Services Research and Primary Care, School of Health Sciences, Faculty of Biology, Medicine and Health, The University of Manchester, Manchester, United Kingdom

5. Cancer Genetics Unit, The Royal Marsden NHS Foundation Trust, London, United Kingdom

6. Department of Medical Genetics, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, United Kingdom

Abstract

PURPOSE Prostate cancer (PCa) is highly heritable. No validated PCa risk model currently exists. We therefore sought to develop a genetic risk model that can provide personalized predicted PCa risks on the basis of known moderate- to high-risk pathogenic variants, low-risk common genetic variants, and explicit cancer family history, and to externally validate the model in an independent prospective cohort. MATERIALS AND METHODS We developed a risk model using a kin-cohort comprising individuals from 16,633 PCa families ascertained in the United Kingdom from 1993 to 2017 from the UK Genetic Prostate Cancer Study, and complex segregation analysis adjusting for ascertainment. The model was externally validated in 170,850 unaffected men (7,624 incident PCas) recruited from 2006 to 2010 to the independent UK Biobank prospective cohort study. RESULTS The most parsimonious model included the effects of pathogenic variants in BRCA2, HOXB13, and BRCA1, and a polygenic score on the basis of 268 common low-risk variants. Residual familial risk was modeled by a hypothetical recessively inherited variant and a polygenic component whose standard deviation decreased log-linearly with age. The model predicted familial risks that were consistent with those reported in previous observational studies. In the validation cohort, the model discriminated well between unaffected men and men with incident PCas within 5 years (C-index, 0.790; 95% CI, 0.783 to 0.797) and 10 years (C-index, 0.772; 95% CI, 0.768 to 0.777). The 50% of men with highest predicted risks captured 86.3% of PCa cases within 10 years. CONCLUSION To our knowledge, this is the first validated risk model offering personalized PCa risks. The model will assist in counseling men concerned about their risk and can facilitate future risk-stratified population screening approaches.

Publisher

American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO)

Subject

Cancer Research,Oncology

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