Prostate Cancer Clinical Trial
— BIDOCOfficial title:
Can Significant Prostate Cancer be Detected With a Short Non-contrast Enhanced Biparametric MRI (bpMRI)?
| Verified date | August 2019 |
| Source | Herlev Hospital |
| Contact | n/a |
| Is FDA regulated | No |
| Health authority | |
| Study type | Interventional |
Our aim is to develop a new diagnostic approach to improve the diagnosis of men suspicious of
having significant prostate cancer (sPCa). The current diagnostic technique (standard
transrectal ultrasound-guided biopsies [TRUS-bx]) rely on multiple prostate biopsy cores
(10-12 samples) and if negative repeated biopsy sessions. This increases both patient
complications (severe infections, bleeding and anxiety) and the diagnosis of insignificant
cancer causing overtreatment. Still, significant cancers are missed. In addition, worldwide
antibiotic-resistant bacteria increase, while effective antibiotics are declining. Thus, a
noninvasive diagnostic tool to improve selection of men with clinically suspicion of PCa who
need a biopsy from those who can avoid one is strongly needed. Previous studies in our
department show that MRI in a selected patient cohort with prior negative TRUS-bx can improve
the detection rate of clinically significant PCa and allows for a more accurate assessment of
cancer stage and aggressiveness. However, the value of an MRI used as a first-line tool in
the diagnostic examination of men in suspicion of PCa is uncertain. Furthermore, a full scale
MRI prostate examination recommended by the European Society of Urogenital Radiology includes
intravenous contrast-media and multiple sequences. This is both time-consuming and cost full,
which reduces its feasibility for more widespread clinical implementation. We believe that a
simpler, faster biparametric MRI (bpMRI) using less scan sequences and circumvents
intravenous contrast-media and anti-peristaltic drugs would decrease image acquisition time,
reduce costs and is sufficient to preserve diagnostic accuracy for sPCa detection in
biopsy-naive men. Consequently, we will include biopsy-naive men in a protocol-based research
project. The objective is to assess the diagnostic accuracy of bpMRI to rule out sPCa and
whether a bpMRI can be used as a diagnostic non-invasive screening tool to 1) improve the
diagnosis of sPCa 2) assess cancer aggressiveness 3) increase precision of biopsies and 4)
reduce the number of biopsy sessions and cores. We evaluate the clinical significance of the
detected cancers and whether bpMRI could be used as a triage test to improve the diagnosis of
sPCa and aid in the determination of which men could safely avoid unnecessary biopsies.
This new diagnostic approach has the potential to significantly reduce patient hazards and
complications. We aim to reach 1000 included men. We believe that bpMRI used in the clinical
decision-making has the potential to change the future management of PCa. However, we still
miss the scientific evidence to substantiate its preliminary promising results before this
technique can be widely used to benefit all men. This large research project is to the best
of our knowledge powered to include the largest patient sample size published within this
field.
| Status | Completed |
| Enrollment | 1063 |
| Est. completion date | December 1, 2018 |
| Est. primary completion date | June 2017 |
| Accepts healthy volunteers | No |
| Gender | Male |
| Age group | 18 Years to 85 Years |
| Eligibility |
Inclusion Criteria: - Age: 18 to 85 years. - Clinical suspicion of PCa based on: serum level of prostate-specific-antigen (PSA) from 2.5 ng/ml in two consecutive measurements and/or abnormal diagital rectal examination (DRE). - Mental status: Patients must be able to understand the objective of the study. - Informed consent: The patient must sign the local Ethics Committee (EC) approved informed consent documents in the presence of the designated staff. Exclusion Criteria: - Previous prostate biopsies. - Previous diagnosis of PCa. - Acute prostatitis. - Contraindications to MRI (cardiac pacemaker, claustrophobia etc). - Infection (temperature > 38 degrees Celsius) - Hip replacement surgery or other metal implants in the pelvic area. |
| Country | Name | City | State |
|---|---|---|---|
| Denmark | Herlev Hospital | Herlev |
| Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
|---|---|
| Herlev Hospital |
Denmark,
| Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Primary | Diagnostic accuracy of a bp-MRI in detection and ruling out significant PCa in biopsy-naive men | All included men undergo bp-MRI at inclusion followed by diagnostic standard TRUS biopsies (current diagnostic standard). Men with any suspicious lesions on bpMRI undergo additional bpMRI-guided biopsies (bpMRI-bx) using bpMRI-TRUS image fusion based software. BpMRI suspicion scores and biopsy results ( detection of any PCa and sPCa) from standard TRUS-bx and bpMRI-bx are compared using combined biopsy results as standard reference. Sensitivity and negative predictive value of bpMRI to detect and rule out sPCa will be determined |
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