Combining genomic analyses with information about clinical outcomes is a highly promising strategy to understanding prostate cancer and its treatment. Researchers say it could change how the disease is predicted and make treatment timelier and more personalized.
Yale Urology Associate Professors Michael S. Leapman, MD, MHS, and Preston C. Sprenkle, MD, led the research efforts published June 14 in JAMA Network Open. In a large collaborative study, touted as the most extensive clinical-transcriptomic linkage ever accomplished, more than 92,000 patients were reviewed. Each had undergone genomic classifier testing between 2016 and 2022 with the Decipher Classifier, a commercially available tool used to estimate prostate cancer risk. They were then linked with administrative information, including insurance claims, pharmacy records, and electronic health record [EHR] data.