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  1. #19431
    Senior Member pierre's Avatar
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    Softly, softly, catchee monkey!
    "Don't be afraid to take a big step if one is indicated. You can't cross a chasm in two small jumps." David Lloyd George

  2. #19432
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    More good news...
    Outperformance confirmed from combined use of Cxbladder

    8/7/2021, 9:48 amGENERALCOMBINED USE OF CXBLADDER PRODUCTS SHOWS SIGNIFICANT OUTPERFORMANCE
    • A pivotal, peer-reviewed paper, accepted for publication in the Journal of Urology, demonstrates the significant clinical and patient benefits from the use of a combination of Cxbladder products to correctly identify haematuria patients, who have urothelial cancer (UC) and also, further segregate those patients with high-impact tumours (HIT) requiring priority investigation.
    • Of significant importance, the study concluded that the sequential use of the Cxbladder products achieved 4.8 times greater efficiency in accurately assigning patients to the physician’s prioritisation of investigation than the latest American Urology Association (AUA) 2020 guidelines.
    Cancer diagnostics company, Pacific Edge Limited, is pleased to advise that a new scientific and clinical paper validating the diagnostic performance of its fourth Cxbladder test, Cxbladder Resolve (CxbR), has been accepted for publication in the Journal of Urology. The Journal of Urology is the official Journal of the AUA and the most widely read and highly cited journal in the field of Urology.
    Cxbladder Resolve was designed for use by a physician following a patient’s initial evaluation using both Cxbladder Triage (CxbT) and Detect (CxbD). Those patients that test positive to CxbT and then also test positive to CxbD, will receive the Cxbladder Resolve (CxbR) test. CxbR accurately identifies those patients with a high-impact tumour (HIT), who require high priority intervention by their urologist. High-impact tumours are those that have the highest probability of invasion and progression and where early detection is critical for a successful outcome.
    The paper titled ‘Cxbladder for prioritising high-risk urothelial cancer patients’ evaluates the use of Cxbladder Resolve, alone and in combination with other Cxbladder tests, to identify and prioritise patients at high risk for urothelial carcinoma/cancer’ (UC) . Cxbladder Resolve was developed on 863 haematuria patients recruited in the US, New Zealand and Australia; and then tested, both separately and in combination with other Cxbladder tests, on a further 548 Kaiser Permanente patients, with outstanding results.
    Of note, Cxbladder Resolve correctly identified all patients with high-impact tumours, allowing those patients to be prioritised for further investigation.
    The paper concluded that Cxbladder Resolve has high sensitivity (92.4%) and specificity (93.8%) and correctly identified all high-impact tumours. In addition, sequential use of Cxbladder tests accurately segregated patients with a low vs high probability of high-impact tumours, enabling the prioritisation of physician resources for these patients.
    With the sequential use of Cxbladder tests for each patient (Triage, followed by Detect, followed by Resolve):
    • 87.6% of patients were correctly ruled out from requiring further workup (negative predictive value 99.4%)
    • 100% of high-impact tumours were accurately identified for prioritised investigation in both study cohorts

    CEO of Pacific Edge, David Darling, said: “Our long-standing strategy has been to develop a suite of Cxbladder products that can be used alone or in combination to address unmet needs across the entire clinical pathway for urothelial cancer. This is a pivotal paper for urologists, outlining the significant increase in clinical resolution that can be achieved from using the multiple Cxbladder products in this fashion. This is the first time that the clinical benefits of this novel approach have been validated.
    “The paper confirmed that the combined use of three of our Cxbladder products for each patient, using just one urine sample, can firstly rule out those who do not have cancer, then accurately identify those with cancer and finally, segregate out those with high-impact tumours for priority investigation. This approach provides significant benefit to both physicians and patients, substantially reducing the number of patients requiring further work up while prioritising those patients with high impact tumours.
    “A significant outcome confirmed by this paper is the outperformance of Cxbladder used in this format where the sequential use of the three Cxbladder tests achieved 4.8 times greater efficiency in accurately assigning patients to the physician’s prioritisation of investigation, than the latest AUA guidelines. We expect this outcome to support additional AUA guideline inclusion and greater adoption of Cxbladder.”
    “A testament to the quality of this study (where the primary author is one of the key Kaiser Permanente’s urologists), is that it shows the successful use of Cxbladder on Kaiser Permanente patients, supporting our now established relationship with one of the US’s largest healthcare provider and payers.”
    Feedback from the Journal’s independent peer reviewers during the publication process was very positive, highlighting the potential for the study to “change the diagnostic paradigm for patients presenting with hematuria, better identifying high-risk patients and decreasing the time to tumor diagnosis.”
    Additionally, “This series of urine based tests appears to represent an exciting pathway for hematuria workups better stratifying risk of malignancy, and perhaps obviating the need for cystoscopy in workup of many patients with hematuria.”
    Reviewers noted that “The study is novel, as results of CxbR have not been reported before (vs CxbT and CxbD). Based on the high-negative predictive value achieved in the cohort, the purported clinical value of the study is to allow clinicians to triage patients with high risk for expedited workup by sending them straight to transurethral resection and avoiding cystoscopy and CT scans in those that are low priority.”

  3. #19433
    Senior Member
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    More good news...
    Outperformance confirmed from combined use of Cxbladder

    8/7/2021, 9:48 amGENERALCOMBINED USE OF CXBLADDER PRODUCTS SHOWS SIGNIFICANT OUTPERFORMANCE
    • A pivotal, peer-reviewed paper, accepted for publication in the Journal of Urology, demonstrates the significant clinical and patient benefits from the use of a combination of Cxbladder products to correctly identify haematuria patients, who have urothelial cancer (UC) and also, further segregate those patients with high-impact tumours (HIT) requiring priority investigation.
    • Of significant importance, the study concluded that the sequential use of the Cxbladder products achieved 4.8 times greater efficiency in accurately assigning patients to the physician’s prioritisation of investigation than the latest American Urology Association (AUA) 2020 guidelines.
    Cancer diagnostics company, Pacific Edge Limited, is pleased to advise that a new scientific and clinical paper validating the diagnostic performance of its fourth Cxbladder test, Cxbladder Resolve (CxbR), has been accepted for publication in the Journal of Urology. The Journal of Urology is the official Journal of the AUA and the most widely read and highly cited journal in the field of Urology.
    Cxbladder Resolve was designed for use by a physician following a patient’s initial evaluation using both Cxbladder Triage (CxbT) and Detect (CxbD). Those patients that test positive to CxbT and then also test positive to CxbD, will receive the Cxbladder Resolve (CxbR) test. CxbR accurately identifies those patients with a high-impact tumour (HIT), who require high priority intervention by their urologist. High-impact tumours are those that have the highest probability of invasion and progression and where early detection is critical for a successful outcome.
    The paper titled ‘Cxbladder for prioritising high-risk urothelial cancer patients’ evaluates the use of Cxbladder Resolve, alone and in combination with other Cxbladder tests, to identify and prioritise patients at high risk for urothelial carcinoma/cancer’ (UC) . Cxbladder Resolve was developed on 863 haematuria patients recruited in the US, New Zealand and Australia; and then tested, both separately and in combination with other Cxbladder tests, on a further 548 Kaiser Permanente patients, with outstanding results.
    Of note, Cxbladder Resolve correctly identified all patients with high-impact tumours, allowing those patients to be prioritised for further investigation.
    The paper concluded that Cxbladder Resolve has high sensitivity (92.4%) and specificity (93.8%) and correctly identified all high-impact tumours. In addition, sequential use of Cxbladder tests accurately segregated patients with a low vs high probability of high-impact tumours, enabling the prioritisation of physician resources for these patients.
    With the sequential use of Cxbladder tests for each patient (Triage, followed by Detect, followed by Resolve):
    • 87.6% of patients were correctly ruled out from requiring further workup (negative predictive value 99.4%)
    • 100% of high-impact tumours were accurately identified for prioritised investigation in both study cohorts

    CEO of Pacific Edge, David Darling, said: “Our long-standing strategy has been to develop a suite of Cxbladder products that can be used alone or in combination to address unmet needs across the entire clinical pathway for urothelial cancer. This is a pivotal paper for urologists, outlining the significant increase in clinical resolution that can be achieved from using the multiple Cxbladder products in this fashion. This is the first time that the clinical benefits of this novel approach have been validated.
    “The paper confirmed that the combined use of three of our Cxbladder products for each patient, using just one urine sample, can firstly rule out those who do not have cancer, then accurately identify those with cancer and finally, segregate out those with high-impact tumours for priority investigation. This approach provides significant benefit to both physicians and patients, substantially reducing the number of patients requiring further work up while prioritising those patients with high impact tumours.
    “A significant outcome confirmed by this paper is the outperformance of Cxbladder used in this format where the sequential use of the three Cxbladder tests achieved 4.8 times greater efficiency in accurately assigning patients to the physician’s prioritisation of investigation, than the latest AUA guidelines. We expect this outcome to support additional AUA guideline inclusion and greater adoption of Cxbladder.”
    “A testament to the quality of this study (where the primary author is one of the key Kaiser Permanente’s urologists), is that it shows the successful use of Cxbladder on Kaiser Permanente patients, supporting our now established relationship with one of the US’s largest healthcare provider and payers.”
    Feedback from the Journal’s independent peer reviewers during the publication process was very positive, highlighting the potential for the study to “change the diagnostic paradigm for patients presenting with hematuria, better identifying high-risk patients and decreasing the time to tumor diagnosis.”
    Additionally, “This series of urine based tests appears to represent an exciting pathway for hematuria workups better stratifying risk of malignancy, and perhaps obviating the need for cystoscopy in workup of many patients with hematuria.”
    Reviewers noted that “The study is novel, as results of CxbR have not been reported before (vs CxbT and CxbD). Based on the high-negative predictive value achieved in the cohort, the purported clinical value of the study is to allow clinicians to triage patients with high risk for expedited workup by sending them straight to transurethral resection and avoiding cystoscopy and CT scans in those that are low priority.”

  4. #19434
    Senior Member pierre's Avatar
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    More good news...
    Outperformance confirmed from combined use of Cxbladder

    Oh dear - more bad news for Psychic.
    "Don't be afraid to take a big step if one is indicated. You can't cross a chasm in two small jumps." David Lloyd George

  5. #19435
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    I think today’s announcement answers this Psychic. Onwards and upwards!

  6. #19436
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    Quote Originally Posted by pierre View Post
    More good news...
    Outperformance confirmed from combined use of Cxbladder

    Oh dear - more bad news for Psychic.
    Not at all! I think this is very encouraging but will wait till I can read the study before becoming too excited.

    You didn't answer my last post Pierre in which I invited you to challenge what I had said. Kinda went to ground on that.
    If you have nothing to constructively add then stay quiet man, don't make this a personal thing. The thread is for debate, if you don't like me questioning things put me on ignore.

  7. #19437
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    Quote Originally Posted by Retired Doc View Post
    I think today’s announcement answers this Psychic. Onwards and upwards!
    Thank you, I'm not sure and had hoped you might comment. I was questioning PE's suggestion that people in the far North could take the Triage Test without travelling to main centres when Triage needs the support of imaging anyway. (this was the DHB's finding in the orig study)
    What were your thoughts on this?

  8. #19438
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    If the protocols call for cystoscopy then it's Whangarei or a travelling clinic, but the resulting imagery is then available to a GP anywhere. My own BT was diagnosed by ulltrasound after acute haematuria and clotting obstruction, but I have no idea whether ultrasound of that quality is available further north.

    But the important bit to me as a patient, is that if the CXBladder suite can avoid even one cystoscopy (leave aside any driving time) I'm for it and I believe that everyone else from the minister downward will be too - if not for the same reasons!.

  9. #19439
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    “A significant outcome confirmed by this paper is the outperformance of Cxbladder used in this format where the sequential use of the three Cxbladder tests achieved 4.8 times greater efficiency in accurately assigning patients to the physician’s prioritisation of investigation, than the latest AUA guidelines. We expect this outcome to support additional AUA guideline inclusion and greater adoption of Cxbladder.”

    Might get some reaction from the woebegone, behind the times AUA.


  10. #19440
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