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Prostate Risk Or Radiology Assessment Non-inferiority Design, Upfront MRI or Risk Calculator in Men With Suspected Prostate Cancer
Sponsor: Norwegian University of Science and Technology
Summary
Thousands of men take a PSA test to investigate whether they have prostate cancer every year. For the vast majority, the test is normal and further investigations are not necessary. In others, the test is sufficiently elevated that men are referred for further investigations. Most men with an elevated PSA are offered an MRI examination of the prostate gland, and for some, a tissue sample of the prostate is also recommended if the suspicion of cancer is high enough. Although this comprehensive investigation reveals most clinically significant , or dangerous cases of cancer, many indolent, or "harmless" cancer cases are also detected, which would not have caused the man any harm during his lifetime (approximately 20% of all prostate cancer diagnoses diagnosed in current clinical practive). Cancer treatment is not recommended for such cases, but for many men, the diagnosis and subsequent follow-up can cause him and his family anxity and concern. In addition, prostate biopsies are unpleasant for the patient and the investigation process is resource-intensive for both the man and the health care service. Risk stratification uses machine learning methods to better identify the men who require further investigations with MRI and tissue samples. In this project, the investigators investigate whether the best risk stratification tools are non-inferior in detecting clinically significant prostate cancer compared to current practice, and whether they lead to fewer tissue samples, MRI scans, less health anxiety, and better cost-effectiveness.
Official title: PRORAND - Prostate Risk or Radiology Assessment Non-inferiority Design, a Comparison of Upfront MRI vs Risk Calculator in Men With Suspected Prostate Cancer
Key Details
Gender
MALE
Age Range
50 Years - 75 Years
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Enrollment
1016
Start Date
2026-03-01
Completion Date
2029-12-31
Last Updated
2026-03-16
Healthy Volunteers
Yes
Conditions
Interventions
European Study of screening for prostate cancer risk calculator
The ERSPC RCs are the currently best known and most utilised multivariable PCa risk stratification tools. All participating men undergo risk stratification by ERSPC RCs to determine need for MRI and for biopsy.
Locations (3)
Sykehuset Levanger
Levanger, Norway
Orkdal sjukehus
Orkanger, Norway
St Olavs Hospital
Trondheim, Norway