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Risk-prediction models in postmenopausal patients with symptoms of suspected ovarian cancer in the UK (ROCkeTS): a multicentre, prospective diagnostic accuracy study - 01/10/24

Doi : 10.1016/S1470-2045(24)00406-6 
Sudha Sundar, ProfMPhil MRCOG a, b, , Ridhi Agarwal, PhD c, Clare Davenport, FFPH PhD c, Katie Scandrett, MSc c, s, Susanne Johnson, FRCOG e, Partha Sengupta, FRCOG f, Radhika Selvi-Vikram, FRCOG g, Fong Lien Kwong, MRCOG a, Sue Mallett, PhD h, Caroline Rick, PhD i, Sean Kehoe, ProfFRCOG MD j, Dirk Timmerman, ProfMD PhD k, m, Tom Bourne, ProfFRCOG PhD n, Ben Van Calster, ProfPhD k, l, Hilary Stobart, MSc o, Richard D Neal, ProfFRCGP PhD p, Usha Menon, ProfMD PhD q, r, Alex Gentry-Maharaj, PhD q, r, Lauren Sturdy, BSc d, Ryan Ottridge, MPhil d, Jon Deeks, ProfPhD c, s
for the

ROCkeTS collaborators*

  Collaborators are listed at the end of the Article
Robert Kent, Natalia Rosello, Vivek Malhotra, Karen Jermy, Tim Duncan, Victoria Ames, Aarti Sharma, Anju Sinha, Majmudar Tarang, Mackenzie Ciara, Neil Hebblethwaite, Kendra Exley, Robert Macdonald, Marianne Harmer, Tracey Hughes, Rob Parker, Ahmed Darwish, Parveen Abedin, Moji Balogun, Bruce Ramsay, Roger Moshy, Mark Roberts, Michelle Russell, Ahmad Sayasneh, Ahmed Abdelbar, Shahram Abdi, Julia Palmer, Ketankumar Gajjar, Dominic Blake, Adam Naskretski, Fateh Ghazal, Harinder Rai, Patrick Keating, Nicholas Wood, Chellappah Gnanachandran, Hafez Alawad, Sonali Kaushik, Sonali Baron, Lavanya Vita, Hans Nagar, Ranjit Manchanda

a Pan Birmingham Gynaecological Cancer Centre, Sandwell and West Birmingham Hospitals NHS Trust, Birmingham, UK 
b Institute of Cancer and Genomic Sciences, University of Birmingham, Birmingham, UK 
c Institute of Applied Health Research, University of Birmingham, Birmingham, UK 
d Birmingham Clinical Trials Unit, University of Birmingham, Birmingham, UK 
e University Hospital Southampton NHS Foundation Trust, Southampton, UK 
f County Durham and Darlington NHS Foundation Trust, Darlington, UK 
g West Hertfordshire Hospitals NHS Trust, Watford, UK 
h Centre for Medical Imaging, University College London, London, UK 
i School of Medicine, University of Nottingham, Nottingham, UK 
j St Peter's College, University of Oxford, Oxford, UK 
k Department of Development and Regeneration, KU Leuven, Leuven, Belgium 
l Leuven Unit for Health Technology Assessment Research (LUHTAR), KU Leuven, Leuven, Belgium 
m Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, University Hospitals KU Leuven, Leuven, Belgium 
n Faculty of Medicine, Department of Metabolism, Digestion and Reproduction, Imperial College London, London, UK 
o ROCkeTS Project Management Group, Birmingham, UK 
p University of Exeter Medical School, University of Exeter, Exeter, UK 
q Department of Women's Cancer, Elizabeth Garrett Anderson Institute for Women's Health, University College London, London, UK 
r MRC Clinical Trials Unit, Institute of Clinical Trials and Methodology, University College London, London, UK 
s NIHR Birmingham Biomedical Research Centre, University Hospitals Birmingham NHS Foundation Trust, University of Birmingham, Birmingham, UK 

* Correspondence to: Prof Sudha Sundar, Pan Birmingham Gynaecological Cancer Centre, Edgbaston, Birmingham, B15 2TT, UK Pan Birmingham Gynaecological Cancer Centre Edgbaston Birmingham B15 2TT UK

Summary

Background

Multiple risk-prediction models are used in clinical practice to triage patients as being at low risk or high risk of ovarian cancer. In the ROCkeTS study, we aimed to identify the best diagnostic test for ovarian cancer in symptomatic patients, through head-to-head comparisons of risk-prediction models, in a real-world setting. Here, we report the results for the postmenopausal cohort.

Methods

In this multicentre, prospective diagnostic accuracy study, we recruited newly presenting female patients aged 16–90 years with non-specific symptoms and raised CA125 or abnormal ultrasound results (or both) who had been referred via rapid access, elective clinics, or emergency presentations from 23 hospitals in the UK. Patients with normal CA125 and simple ovarian cysts of smaller than 5 cm in diameter, active non-ovarian malignancy, or previous ovarian malignancy, or those who were pregnant or declined a transvaginal scan, were ineligible. In this analysis, only postmenopausal participants were included. Participants completed a symptom questionnaire, gave a blood sample, and had transabdominal and transvaginal ultrasounds performed by International Ovarian Tumour Analysis consortium (IOTA)-certified sonographers. Index tests were Risk of Malignancy 1 (RMI1) at a threshold of 200, Risk of Malignancy Algorithm (ROMA) at multiple thresholds, IOTA Assessment of Different Neoplasias in the Adnexa (ADNEX) at thresholds of 3% and 10%, IOTA SRRisk model at thresholds of 3% and 10%, IOTA Simple Rules (malignant vs benign, or inconclusive), and CA125 at 35 IU/mL. In a post-hoc analysis, the Ovarian Adnexal and Reporting Data System (ORADS) at 10% was derived from IOTA ultrasound variables using established methods since ORADS was described after completion of recruitment. Index tests were conducted by study staff masked to the results of the reference standard. The comparator was RMI1 at the 250 threshold (the current UK National Health Service standard of care). The reference standard was surgical or biopsy tissue histology or cytology within 3 months, or a self-reported diagnosis of ovarian cancer at 12 month follow-up. The primary outcome was diagnostic accuracy at predicting primary invasive ovarian cancer versus benign or normal histology, assessed by analysing the sensitivity, specificity, C-index, area under receiver operating characteristic curve, positive and negative predictive values, and calibration plots in participants with conclusive reference standard results and available index test data. This study is registered with the International Standard Randomised Controlled Trial Number registry (ISRCTN17160843).

Findings

Between July 13, 2015, and Nov 30, 2018, 1242 postmenopausal patients were recruited, of whom 215 (17%) had primary ovarian cancer. 166 participants had missing, inconclusive, or other reference standard results; therefore, data from a maximum of 1076 participants were used to assess the index tests for the primary outcome. Compared with RMI1 at 250 (sensitivity 82·9% [95% CI 76·7 to 88·0], specificity 87·4% [84·9 to 89·6]), IOTA ADNEX at 10% was more sensitive (difference of –13·9% [–20·2 to –7·6], p<0·0001) but less specific (difference of 28·5% [24·7 to 32·3], p<0·0001). ROMA at 29·9 had similar sensitivity (difference of –3·6% [–9·1 to 1·9], p=0·24) but lower specificity (difference of 5·2% [2·5 to 8·0], p=0·0001). RMI1 at 200 had similar sensitivity (difference of –2·1% [–4·7 to 0·5], p=0·13) but lower specificity (difference of 3·0% [1·7 to 4·3], p<0·0001). IOTA SRRisk model at 10% had similar sensitivity (difference of –4·3% [–11·0 to –2·3], p=0·23) but lower specificity (difference of 16·2% [12·6 to 19·8], p<0·0001). IOTA Simple Rules had similar sensitivity (difference of –1·6% [–9·3 to 6·2], p=0·82) and specificity (difference of –2·2% [–5·1 to 0·6], p=0·14). CA125 at 35 IU/mL had similar sensitivity (difference of –2·1% [–6·6 to 2·3], p=0·42) but higher specificity (difference of 6·7% [4·3 to 9·1], p<0·0001). In a post-hoc analysis, when compared with RMI1 at 250, ORADS achieved similar sensitivity (difference of –2·1%, 95% CI –8·6 to 4·3, p=0·60) and lower specificity (difference of 10·2%, 95% CI 6·8 to 13·6, p<0·0001).

Interpretation

In view of its higher sensitivity than RMI1 at 250, despite some loss in specificity, we recommend that IOTA ADNEX at 10% should be considered as the new standard-of-care diagnostic in ovarian cancer for postmenopausal patients.

Funding

UK National Institute for Health and Care Research.

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© 2024  The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ltd. This is an Open Access article under the CC BY 4.0 license. Publié par Elsevier Masson SAS. Tous droits réservés.
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