Journal of Clinical Medicine (Feb 2023)

The Combined Effect of Polygenic Risk Score and Prostate Health Index in Chinese Men Undergoing Prostate Biopsy

  • Xiaohao Ruan,
  • Da Huang,
  • Jingyi Huang,
  • Jinlun Huang,
  • Yongle Zhan,
  • Yishuo Wu,
  • Qiang Ding,
  • Danfeng Xu,
  • Haowen Jiang,
  • Wei Xue,
  • Rong Na

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm12041343
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 4
p. 1343

Abstract

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To date, the combined effect of polygenic risk score (PRS) and prostate health index (phi) on PCa diagnosis in men undergoing prostate biopsy has never been investigated. A total of 3166 patients who underwent initial prostate biopsy in three tertiary medical centers from August 2013 to March 2019 were included. PRS was calculated on the basis of the genotype of 102 reported East-Asian-specific risk variants. It was then evaluated in the univariable or multivariable logistic regression models that were internally validated using repeated 10-fold cross-validation. Discriminative performance was assessed by area under the receiver operating curve (AUC) and net reclassification improvement (NRI) index. Compared with men in the first quintile of age and family history adjusted PRS, those in the second, third, fourth, and fifth quintiles were 1.86 (odds ratio, 95% confidence interval (CI): 1.34–2.56), 2.07 (95%CI: 1.50–2.84), 3.26 (95%CI: 2.36–4.48), and 5.06 (95%CI: 3.68–6.97) times as likely to develop PCa (all p phi) at 27–36 (Ptrend 36 (Ptrend ≤ 0.001). Notably, men with moderate phi (27–36) but highest PRS (top 20% percentile) would have a comparable risk of PCa (positive rate: 26.7% or 31.3%) than men with high phi (>36) but lowest PRS (bottom 20% percentile positive rate: 27.4% or 34.2%). The combined model of PRS, phi, and other clinical risk factors provided significantly better performance (AUC: 0.904, 95%CI: 0.887–0.921) than models without PRS. Adding PRS to clinical risk models could provide significant net benefit (NRI, from 8.6% to 27.6%), especially in those early onset patients (NRI, from 29.2% to 44.9%). PRS may provide additional predictive value over phi for PCa. The combination of PRS and phi that effectively captured both clinical and genetic PCa risk is clinically practical, even in patients with gray-zone PSA.

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