Urinary Analysis of FGFR3 and TERT Gene Mutations Enhances Performance of Cxbladder Tests and Improves Patient Risk Stratification

Yair Lotan, Jay D. Raman, Badrinath Konety, Siamak Daneshmand, Florian Schroeck, Shahrokh F. Shariat, Peter Black, Michel De Lange, Scott Asroff, Evan Goldfischer, Mitchell Efros, Kian Tai Chong, Eugene Huang, Hong Liang Chua, Qing Hui Wu, Siying Yeow, Weida Lau, Jin Yong, Molly Eng

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

5 Scopus citations

Abstract

Purpose: Cxbladder tests are urinary biomarker tests for detection of urothelial carcinoma. We developed enhanced Cxbladder tests that incorporate DNA analysis of 6 single nucleotide polymorphisms for the FGFR3 and TERT genes, in addition to the current 5 mRNA biomarkers and clinical risk factors. Materials and Methods: Two multicenter, prospective studies were undertaken in: (1) U.S. patients with gross hematuria aged ≥18 years and (2) Singaporean patients with gross hematuria or microhematuria aged >21 years. All patients provided a midstream urine sample and underwent cystoscopy. Samples were retrospectively analyzed using enhanced Cxbladder-Triage (risk stratifies patients), enhanced Cxbladder-Detect (risk stratifies patients and detects positive patients), and the combination enhanced Cxbladder-Triage × Cxbladder-Detect. Results: In the pooled cohort (N=804; gross hematuria: n=484, microhematuria: n=320), enhanced Cxbladder-Detect had a sensitivity of 97% (95% CI 89%-100%), specificity of 90% (95% CI 88%-92%), and negative predictive value of 99.7% (95% CI 99%-100%) for detection of urothelial carcinoma. Overall, 83% of patients were enhanced Cxbladder-Detect-negative (ie, needed no further work-up). Of 133 enhanced Cxbladder-Detect-positive patients, 59 had a confirmed tumor, of which 19 were low-grade noninvasive papillary carcinoma or papillary urothelial neoplasm of low malignant potential. In total, 40 tumors were high-grade Ta, T1-T4, Tis, including concomitant carcinoma in situ. Of the 74 patients with normal cystoscopy, 41 were positive by single nucleotide polymorphism analysis. Enhanced Cxbladder-Triage and enhanced Cxbladder-Detect had significantly better specificity than the first-generation Cxbladder tests (P <.001). Conclusions: This study in ethnically diverse patients with hematuria showed the analytical validity of the enhanced Cxbladder tests.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)762-772
Number of pages11
JournalJournal of Urology
Volume209
Issue number4
DOIs
StatePublished - Apr 1 2023

Keywords

  • biomarkers
  • clinical laboratory techniques
  • hematuria
  • sensitivity and specificity
  • tumor
  • urinary bladder neoplasms

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Urology

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