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Study shows urine test for prostate cancer could be used at home

Date:
February 3, 2025
Source:
Vanderbilt University Medical Center
Summary:
Researchers have found a simple at home urine test for prostate cancer screening is highly accurate.
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Researchers at Vanderbilt and the University of Michigan have shown that a simple at-home urine test for prostate cancerscreeningis highly accurate. The exciting new results, published in The Journal of Urology, build upon a prior Vanderbilt study of prostate cancer screening that required a digital rectal exam.

The results are important because this could enable at-home testing and increased access to testing for patients undergoing telehealth care or living in remote areas.

Traditional prostate cancer screening with PSA testing and biopsy has been shown to lead to unnecessary procedures and overdiagnosis of low-grade cancers, according to lead author Jeffrey Tosoian, MD, MPH, assistant professor of Urology and director of Translational Cancer Research at Vanderbilt University Medical Center.

"The test is highly accurate for ruling out the presence of clinically significant prostate cancers -- those that merit treatment -- so that patients with a negative test result can confidently avoid having to undergo MRI or biopsy," Tosoian said.

"In the current study, this non-invasive urine test would have allowed patients with an elevated PSA to avoid 34-53% of unnecessary biopsies."

MyProstateScore 2.0 (MPS2) urine test is a non-invasive test used to help identify high-grade prostate cancers that need early detection and treatment by analyzing 18 genes associated with prostate cancer.

In a 2024 study, Tosoian and colleagues developed and validated the test in urine collected after a digital rectal exam, but the new study re-validated the test in urine obtained without the exam and the accuracy was very similar.

The test is used to rule out the presence of clinically significant prostate cancer, meaning those that merit treatment, with high accuracy in men being evaluated for prostate cancer due to elevated serum PSA (PSA >3 ng/ml).

"Rectal exams are no fun," Tosoian said. "These findings will increase the impact of the test, as it can now be used for at-home testing."

Tosoian said next steps will be to demonstrate the use of MPS2 in patients undergoing active surveillance for low-grade prostate cancer. If proven to be similarly accurate in this setting, use of MPS2 could eliminate or reduce the need for prostate biopsies during active surveillance, enabling reliable non-invasive monitoring of low-grade cancers.


Story Source:

Materials provided by Vanderbilt University Medical Center. Original written by Craig Boerner. Note: Content may be edited for style and length.


Journal Reference:

  1. Jeffrey J. Tosoian , Yuping Zhang , Jacob I. Meyers , Spencer Heaton , Javed Siddiqui , Lanbo Xiao , Keavash D. Assani , Daniel A. Barocas , Ashley E. Ross , Zoey Chopra , Grace C. Herron , Jacob A. Edelson , Nathan J. Graham , Udit Singhal , Simpa S. Salami , Todd M. Morgan , Ganesh S. Palapattu , John T. Wei , and Arul M. Chinnaiyan. Clinical Validation of MyProstateScore 2.0 Testing Using First-Catch, Non–Digital Rectal Examination Urine. , 2025 DOI: 10.1097/JU.0000000000004421

Cite This Page:

Vanderbilt University Medical Center. "Study shows urine test for prostate cancer could be used at home." ScienceDaily. ScienceDaily, 3 February 2025. <www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2025/02/250203142246.htm>.
Vanderbilt University Medical Center. (2025, February 3). Study shows urine test for prostate cancer could be used at home. ScienceDaily. Retrieved February 3, 2025 from www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2025/02/250203142246.htm
Vanderbilt University Medical Center. "Study shows urine test for prostate cancer could be used at home." ScienceDaily. www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2025/02/250203142246.htm (accessed February 3, 2025).

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