Hypothesis and primary objective The aim of the study is the implementation of new
biomarkers (Proclarix) in order to increase the sensitivity and specificity of PSA-based
PCa early detection avoiding unnecessary prostate biopsies thus decreasing the associated
morbidity (infections, bleeding, urinary retention, etc.). PSA values, Proclarix and
mpMRI findings will be correlated with the results of the prostate biopsy in order to
improve patient selection for future biopsies in order to avoid unnecessary prostate
biopsies, but still be able to detect relevant carcinomas at an early stage. The null
hypothesis in our observational study is the lack of superiority in PCa early detection
when using the Proclarix over PSA alone.
Primary and secondary endpoints The primary endpoint is the sensitivity and specificity
of the Proclarix risk score in relation to the prediction of significant prostate cancer
(Gleason score >7) in the prostate biopsy. These parameters should be compared to PSA,
%fPSA and the mpMRI findings.
The secondary endpoints:
The correlation of the data collected from mpMRI (according to PI-RADS) to the biopsy
results. The combination of clinical parameters, PSA values, Proclarix, mpMRI and
pathology results in order to develop predictive risk stratification tool (e.g. risk
score or nomogram) for PCa.
Determination of the analytical performance of the recently introduced Alinity i-Systems
for PSA determination compared to the Architect i2000sr system (Abbott Laboratories) in
terms of precision and validation of the reference interval according to the CLSI
guidelines.
The study design of this single-center, single-arm, non-blinded prospective study
includes the collection and storage of 40 ml serum from all patients who meet the
inclusion criteria according to point 3.1 and are planned for a prostate biopsy as part
of the routine clinical PCa workup with mpMRI of the prostate starting from September
2021. While participants are going to be recruited in prospective manner and asked for
their consent, the Proclarix biomarkers as well as %fPSA and tPSA will be determined
post-interventionally (analog to the PROPOSE trial).
According to the power analysis, 480 samples are necessary to achieve a 25%,
statistically significant improvement in the negative predictive value of Proclarix
compared to MPSA, assuming that 50% or more of all patients have a positive biopsy.
The mpMRI findings and biopsy results should be analyzed by frequency distribution and
compared by standard statistical testing.The design of a risk stratification tool should
be achieved by means of logistic regression analysis. Various parameter combinations
should be compared by standard statistical testing.In order to evaluate the performance
of the recently introduced Alinity i system for PSA assays in terms of precision and
correlation compared to the Architect i2000sr system (Abbott Laboratories) and to
validate the reference interval according to CLSI guidelines, approximately 100 serum
samples will be included for the comparison of the two methods by means of standard
statistical testing. SPSS v.24 standard statistical package will be used for the most of
the data analysis. The statistical analysis will be performed with assistance of external
statistician. P-value <0.05 or diverging boundaries of 95% confidence intervals will be
considered as statistically significant.