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The BARCODE1 Pilot: a feasibility study of using germline single nucleotide polymorphisms to target prostate cancer screening.

Sarah BenafifHolly Ni RaghallaighEva McGrowderEdward J SaundersMark N BrookSibel SayaReshma RageevakumarSarah WakerellDenzil JamesAnthony ChamberlainNatalie TaylorMatthew HogbenBarbara BentonLucia D'MelloKathryn MyhillChristos MikropoulosHywel Bowen-PerkinsImran RafiMichelle FerrisAndre BeattieShophia KuganolipavaTamsin SevenoaksJuliet BowerPardeep KumarSteven HazellNandita M deSouzaAntonis AntoniouElizabeth K BancroftZsofia Kote-JaraiRosalind Eeles
Published in: BJU international (2021)
The BARCODE1 Pilot has shown this community study in the UK to be feasible, with an overall uptake of 26%. The main BARCODE1 study is now open and will recruit 5000 men. The results of BARCODE1 will be important in defining the role of genetic profiling in targeted PCa population screening. Patient Summary What is the paper about? Very few prostate cancer screening programmes currently exist anywhere in the world. Our pilot study investigated if men in the UK would find it acceptable to have a genetic test based on a saliva sample to examine their risk of prostate cancer development. This test would guide whether men are offered prostate cancer screening tests. What does it mean for patients? We found that the study design was acceptable: 26% of men invited to take part agreed to have the test. The majority of men who were found to have an increased genetic risk of prostate cancer underwent further tests offered (prostate MRI scan and biopsy). We have now expanded the study to enrol 5000 men. The BARCODE1 study will be important in examining whether this approach could be used for large-scale population prostate cancer screening.
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