Elsevier

Genetics in Medicine

Volume 17, Issue 10, October 2015, Pages 789-795
Genetics in Medicine

Original Research Article
Implications of polygenic risk-stratified screening for prostate cancer on overdiagnosis

https://doi.org/10.1038/gim.2014.192Get rights and content
Under a Creative Commons license
open access

Abstract

Purpose

This study aimed to quantify the probability of overdiagnosis of prostate cancer by polygenic risk.

Methods

We calculated the polygenic risk score based on 66 known prostate cancer susceptibility variants for 17,012 men aged 50–69 years (9,404 men identified with prostate cancer and 7,608 with no cancer) derived from three UK-based ongoing studies. We derived the probabilities of overdiagnosis by quartiles of polygenic risk considering that the observed prevalence of screen-detected prostate cancer is a combination of underlying incidence, mean sojourn time (MST), test sensitivity, and overdiagnosis.

Results

Polygenic risk quartiles 1 to 4 comprised 9, 18, 25, and 48% of the cases, respectively. For a prostate-specific antigen test sensitivity of 80% and MST of 9 years, 43, 30, 25, and 19% of the prevalent screen-detected cancers in quartiles 1 to 4, respectively, were likely to be overdiagnosed cancers. Overdiagnosis decreased with increasing polygenic risk, with 56% decrease between the lowest and the highest polygenic risk quartiles.

Conclusion

Targeting screening to men at higher polygenic risk could reduce the problem of overdiagnosis and lead to a better benefit-to-harm balance in screening for prostate cancer.

Keywords

overdiagnosis
polygenic risk
prostate cancer
risk-stratified screening

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