Urinary Free Glycosaminoglycans Identify Adults at High Risk of Developing Early-stage High-grade Bladder Cancer
Journal article, 2024

Background and objective: Screening for bladder cancer (BCa) could reduce mortality via early detection of early-stage high-grade (Ta/T1 N0 M0 grade 2–3) disease. Noninvasive biomarkers could aid in screening, but current markers lack the specificity required. The urinary free glycosaminoglycan profile (GAGome) is a promising biomarker for early detection of BCa metabolism. Methods: In a prospective case-control development study, we included patients with BCa or no evidence of disease (NED) and measured the urinary GAGome. We then developed a score to predict the probability of BCa using GAGome features that correlated with BCa versus NED according to Bayesian regression. Next, in a retrospective, population-based, case-control study, we included adults from the Lifelines Cohort Study who were presumed healthy at baseline. All cases with BCa confirmed in the cancer registry by the 2-yr or 6-yr study visit were matched to randomly selected control subjects. We developed a reference logistic regression model using age and sex to predict BCa at 7 yr after baseline. We then added the GAGome score to the model and assessed model improvement using the likelihood ratio test. We dichotomized outputs for the reference model and saturated model (reference + GAGome score) into high-risk versus low-risk categories using a 99% specificity cutoff and estimated the sensitivity for association with BCa at 7 yr. Key findings and limitations: We prospectively included 51 individuals with BCa and 38 with NED and observed alterations in three GAGome features compatible with BCa. We developed a score that discriminated BCa with an area under the receiver operating characteristic curve of 0.77 (95% confidence interval [CI] 0.67–0.87). We retrospectively selected a cohort of 1088 presumed healthy adults (median age 48 yr, 56% females), of whom 48 had developed BCa by 7 yr after baseline (median time to diagnosis 1.4 yr). The GAGome score was an independent predictor of BCa at 7 yr when added to the reference model (p < 0.001). The sensitivity for BCa at 7 yr for high-risk subjects was 31% (95% CI 20–43%) using the saturated model and 17% (95% CI 4.7–29%) using the reference model at 99% specificity (95% CI 98–99%). Conclusions and clinical implications: The urinary free GAGome is specifically altered in BCa and can be used for noninvasive identification of adults at high risk of developing BCa, independent of age and sex. This information could be useful for the design of risk-stratified targeted screening programs for BCa. Patient summary: We tested whether measurement of a class of sugars called glycosaminoglycans (GAGs) in urine could be used for early detection of bladder cancer. Our results show that GAG levels in urine can distinguish people at high risk of developing bladder cancer within 7 years, even if they are healthy at the time of the urine sampling.

Bladder cancer

Glycosaminoglycans

Screening

Cancer metabolism

Urinary biomarkers

Author

Francesco Gatto

Chalmers, Life Sciences, Systems and Synthetic Biology

Karolinska Institutet

Elypta AB

Sinisa Bratulic

Chalmers, Life Sciences, Systems and Synthetic Biology

Elypta AB

F. Maccari

University of Modena and Reggio Emilia

F. Galeotti

University of Modena and Reggio Emilia

N. Volpi

University of Modena and Reggio Emilia

Jens B Nielsen

BioInnovation Institute

Chalmers, Life Sciences, Systems and Synthetic Biology

Yair Lotan

UT Southwestern Medical Center

Henrik Kjölhede

Sahlgrenska University Hospital

University of Gothenburg

European Urology Open Science

26661691 (ISSN) 26661683 (eISSN)

Vol. 68 40-47

Subject Categories

Urology and Nephrology

Cancer and Oncology

DOI

10.1016/j.euros.2024.08.001

More information

Latest update

8/30/2024