key: cord-0941661-qn7p57q6 authors: Marsden, Teresa; McCartan, Neil; Brown, Louise; Rodriguez-Justo, Manuel; Syer, Tom; Brembilla, Giorgio; Van Hemelrijck, Mieke; Coolen, Ton; Attard, Gerhardt; Punwani, Shonit; Moore, Caroline M.; Ahmed, Hashim U.; Emberton, Mark title: The ReIMAGINE prostate cancer risk study protocol: A prospective cohort study in men with a suspicion of prostate cancer who are referred onto an MRI-based diagnostic pathway with donation of tissue, blood and urine for biomarker analyses. date: 2022-02-24 journal: PLoS One DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0259672 sha: f90676fb60a5a0832a8493b374cbe4d5f5b565b8 doc_id: 941661 cord_uid: qn7p57q6 INTRODUCTION: The ReIMAGINE Consortium was conceived to develop risk-stratification models that might incorporate the full range of novel prostate cancer (PCa) diagnostics (both commercial and academic). METHODS: ReIMAGINE Risk is an ethics approved (19/LO/1128) multicentre, prospective, observational cohort study which will recruit 1000 treatment-naive men undergoing a multi-parametric MRI (mpMRI) due to an elevated PSA (≤20ng/ml) or abnormal prostate examination who subsequently had a suspicious mpMRI (score≥3, stage ≤T3bN0M0). Primary outcomes include the detection of ≥Gleason 7 PCa at baseline and time to clinical progression, metastasis and death. Baseline blood, urine, and biopsy cores for fresh prostate tissue samples (2 targeted and 1 non-targeted) will be biobanked for future analysis. High-resolution scanning of pathology whole-slide imaging and MRI-DICOM images will be collected. Consortium partners will be granted access to data and biobanks to develop and validate biomarkers using correlation to mpMRI, biopsy-based disease status and long-term clinical outcomes. RESULTS: Recruitment began in September 2019(n = 533). A first site opened in September 2019 (n = 296), a second in November 2019 (n = 210) and a third in December 2020 (n = 27). Acceptance to the study has been 65% and a mean of 36.5ml(SD+/-10.0), 12.9ml(SD+/-3.7) and 2.8ml(SD+/-0.7) urine, plasma and serum donated for research, respectively. There are currently 4 academic and 15 commercial partners spanning imaging (~9 radiomics, artificial intelligence/machine learning), fluidic (~3 blood-based and ~2urine-based) and tissue-based (~1) biomarkers. CONCLUSION: The consortium will develop, or adjust, risk models for PCa, and provide a platform for evaluating the role of novel diagnostics in the era of pre-biopsy MRI and targeted biopsy. The ReIMAGINE Consortium was conceived to develop risk-stratification models that might incorporate the full range of novel prostate cancer (PCa) diagnostics (both commercial and academic). ReIMAGINE Risk is an ethics approved (19/LO/1128) multicentre, prospective, observational cohort study which will recruit 1000 treatment-naive men undergoing a multi-parametric MRI (mpMRI) due to an elevated PSA (�20ng/ml) or abnormal prostate examination who subsequently had a suspicious mpMRI (score�3, stage �T3bN0M0). Primary outcomes include the detection of �Gleason 7 PCa at baseline and time to clinical progression, metastasis and death. Baseline blood, urine, and biopsy cores for fresh prostate tissue samples (2 targeted and 1 non-targeted) will be biobanked for future analysis. High-resolution scanning The prostate cancer (PCa) diagnostic pathway has undergone significant change in recent years and a number of guidelines now recommend multi-parametric MRI as the first line investigation for those with suspected organ-confined disease [1] [2] [3] . Before this, diagnosis and risk stratification was reliant upon clinical examination, PSA and systematic transrectal ultrasound-guided (TRUS) biopsy, but we are now aware how imprecise this diagnostic strategy was. Recent studies that used an exacting reference standard showed that over half of men with clinically significant prostate cancer were incorrectly diagnosed when exposed to TRUSbiopsy [4] . The incorporation of imaging into the diagnostic pathway has nearly doubled the probability of accurate baseline risk stratification compared to what went before. This is because biopsy sampling is now directed to areas of radiologically abnormal tissue with a high probability of clinically significant PCa rather than reliance on a systematic sampling approach which is arguably a somewhat random process [4] . The result is fewer missed clinically significant cancers, less over-diagnosis of clinically insignificant PCa and less harm from fewer men biopsied. Current prostate cancer risk models (largely in the form of risk calculators) continue to inform treatment allocation but are based upon data collected during an era in which systematic TRUS-biopsy was the standard of care. When the histological outputs of modern-day diagnostics are applied to such models there is a danger of risk inflation as 'risk' is amplified (towards the truth). The result is that mens' expected risk might be exaggerated and the risk of overtreatment increases as a result [5, 6] . The ReIMAGINE consortium was conceived to address the need for new or adjusted prostate cancer risk stratification models to reflect MRI-directed diagnostic strategy. The ReIMAGINE consortium is a collaboration between several academic and commercial partners to use diagnostics that span imaging, fluidic and tissue-based data to define novel, measurable and deeply phenotyped mpMRI disease cohorts, known as endotypes. Within the ReIMAGINE Prostate Cancer Risk study, the principal work-strand of the ReIMAGINE Consortium, inputs collected during MR-led diagnostics will be used to inform novel baseline riskstratification systems and prognostic models. The longitudinal component of the study will assess cancer progression, time to metastasis and prostate cancer related death through national healthcare data linkage. Deep phenotyping of measurable mpMRI disease endotypes and long-term follow up will permit the first insights into characteristics that define significant disease and redefine risk stratification in the mpMRI diagnostic era. 2 Design and methods: The ReIMAGINE prostate cancer risk protocol ReIMAGINE Prostate Cancer Risk is a multi-centre, prospective, observational, longitudinal cohort study of patients referred to secondary care with a suspicion of prostate cancer (elevated PSA and/or abnormal digital rectal exam) or those who are having further tests for re-stratification of pre-existing low risk disease. The study represents level 1b evidence for diagnostic and prognostic studies [7] . Participants will be recruited from a number of high-volume NHS prostate cancer diagnostic centres in London, U.K. where pre-biopsy mpMRI followed by MRI-targeted prostate biopsies are established as standard of care. Consenting men will be asked to donate research samples (blood, urine and fresh prostate tissue) for biomarker analysis at the time of their NHS standard of care prostate biopsies. Consent will also be sought for research access to pre-biopsy prostate mpMRI data and national medical records until death (should further funding be secured). Biomarker analysis of donated samples will complete the cross-sectional component of the study. Participants exit the study following collection of tissue samples and revert to the NHS standard of care prostate cancer pathway. Standard of care pathology results are provided during a routine NHS clinic in accordance with local hospital protocol. This manuscript reflects the current protocol version 2.1, 12 November 2019. The ReIMAGINE project includes a work strand which focuses solely on patient and public involvement (PPI). The PPI committee consists of patients, and the wider public, who have been affected by, or have experience of, prostate cancer. The committee meet at least once every three months to inform prioritisation of research outputs, steer media outputs, and assist with development of study materials e.g. participant information videos. All patient facing documents are reviewed by a PPI representative or Chair of the PPI Sub-Committee, and its members. The PPI team has been responsible for the development of the ReIMAGINE Consortium website (https://www.reimagine-pca.org). The website hosts a range of patient and media information resources relevant to each work strand of the consortium. Resources include details of the consortium directors, consortium partners, and links to participant and public information videos. Additional COVID-19 specific resources have been provided on the website since the study resumed recruitment in April 2020, and outline the steps taken to reduce the risk of COVID-19 exposure during a study visit. ReIMAGINE Risk aims to recruit 1000 men who are undergoing standard of care mpMRI directed biopsy following detection of an MRI lesion. Men with a PSA of less than or equal to 20 ng/ml who have undergone an mpMRI prostate during an NHS diagnostic work-up will be invited to participate in the study if a lesion scoring 3, 4 or 5 (radiological stage 6months) Willing and able to provide written informed consent Men unable to donate tissue, blood or urine Previous prostate cancer treatment Previous prostate biopsy <12 months from date of the mpMRI scan used to assess study eligibility (scoring Likert / PIRADSv2. 1 3, 4 ReIMAGINE Prostate Cancer Risk is a multi-centre, prospective, observational, longitudinal cohort study of patients referred to secondary care with a suspicion of prostate cancer (elevated PSA and/or abnormal digital rectal exam) or those who are having further tests for re-stratification of pre-existing low risk disease. Men with a PSA of less than or equal to 20 ng/ml who have undergone an mpMRI prostate during an NHS diagnostic work-up will be invited to participate in the study if a lesion scoring 3, 4 or 5 (radiological stage