Proteomics International Laboratories Ltd (ASX:PIQ) Breakthrough Results For Endometriosis Diagnostic Blood Test

Sly Saint

Senior Member (Voting Rights)
Proteomics International Laboratories Ltd (ASXIQ), a pioneer in precision diagnostics, is pleased to announce the publication of new results in the journal Human Reproduction showing its PromarkerEndo blood test can diagnose all stages of endometriosis with high accuracy.
- Plasma protein biomarker panel identifies all stages of endometriosis with high accuracy
- Refined PromarkerEndo blood test able to distinguish healthy individuals and symptomatic cases from early stages of disease
- A prototype PromarkerEndo model achieved excellent diagnostic performance across earlier disease stages and a near perfect accuracy in distinguishing severe endometriosis from symptomatic controls
- Results from a study of 805 participant samples published in the prestigious medical journal Human Reproduction
- The test has potential application in the context of fertility where there is approximately a three-fold increased incidence of endometriosis in otherwise healthy women undergoing fertility treatments
- Endometriosis affects one in nine women and girls and currently diagnosis typically takes an average of 7 years
Endometriosis, a chronic condition affecting millions of women worldwide, often takes an average of seven years to diagnose due to the reliance on invasive laparoscopy. The new study has identified a breakthrough: a novel panel of 10 plasma protein biomarkers that could revolutionise the diagnosis of this debilitating disease.

Proteomics International Laboratories Ltd (ASXIQ) Breakthrough Results For Endometriosis Diagnostic Blood Test
 
Identification of plasma protein biomarkers for endometriosis and the development of statistical models for disease diagnosis

E.M. Schoeman, S. Bringans, K. Peters, T. Casey, C. Andronis, L. Chen, M. Duong, J.E. Girling, M. Healey, B.A. Boughton, D. Ismail, J. Ito, C. Laming, H. Lim, M. Mead, M. Raju, P. Tan, R. Lipscombe, S. Holdsworth-Carson, P.A.W. Rogers

Published: 24 December 2024


Study Question
Can a panel of plasma protein biomarkers be identified to accurately and specifically diagnose endometriosis?

Summary Answer
A novel panel of 10 plasma protein biomarkers was identified and validated, demonstrating strong predictive accuracy for the diagnosis of endometriosis.

What is known already
Endometriosis poses intricate medical challenges for affected individuals and their physicians, yet diagnosis currently takes an average of 7 years and normally requires invasive laparoscopy. Consequently, the need for a simple, accurate non-invasive diagnostic tool is paramount.

Study design, size, and duration
This study compared 805 participants across two independent clinical populations, with the status of all endometriosis and symptomatic control samples confirmed by laparoscopy. A proteomics workflow was used to identify and validate plasma protein biomarkers for the diagnosis of endometriosis.

Participants/Materials, Setting, Methods
A proteomics discovery experiment identified candidate biomarkers before a targeted mass spectrometry assay was developed and used to compare plasma samples from 464 endometriosis cases, 153 general population controls, and 132 symptomatic controls. Three multivariate models were developed: Model 1 (logistic regression) for endometriosis cases versus general population controls, Model 2 (logistic regression) for rASRM stage II to IV (mild to severe) endometriosis cases versus symptomatic controls, and Model 3 (random forest) for stage IV (severe) endometriosis cases versus symptomatic controls.

Main results and the role of chance
A panel of 10 protein biomarkers were identified across the three models which added significant value to clinical factors. Model 3 (severe endometriosis vs symptomatic controls) performed the best with an area under the receiver operating characteristic curve (AUC) of 0.997 (95% CI 0.994–1.000). This model could also accurately distinguish symptomatic controls from early-stage endometriosis when applied to the remaining dataset (AUCs ≥0.85 for stage I to III endometriosis). Model 1 also demonstrated strong predictive performance with an AUC of 0.993 (95% CI 0.988–0.998), while Model 2 achieved an AUC of 0.729 (95% CI 0.676–0.783).

Limitations, reasons for caution
The study participants were mostly of European ethnicity and the results may be biased from undiagnosed endometriosis in controls. Further analysis is required to enable the generalizability of the findings to other populations and settings.

Wider implications of the findings
In combination, these plasma protein biomarkers and resulting diagnostic models represent a potential new tool for the non-invasive diagnosis of endometriosis.

Study funding/Competing interest(s)
Subject recruitment at The Royal Women’s Hospital, Melbourne, was supported in part by funding from the Australian National Health and Medical Research Council (NHMRC) project grants GNT1105321 and GNT1026033 and Australian Medical Research Future Fund grant no. MRF1199715 (P.A.W.R., S.H.-C., and M.H.). Proteomics International has filed patent WO 2021/184060 A1 that relates to endometriosis biomarkers described in this manuscript; S.B., R.L., and T.C. declare an interest in this patent. J.I., S.B., C.L., D.I., H.L., K.P., M.D., M.M., M.R., P.T., R.L., and T.C. are shareholders in Proteomics International. Otherwise, the authors have no conflicts of interest.

Link | PDF (Human Reproduction) [Open Access]

----------------------------------------------------------------

I don't see that they validated the model on unseen data. The reported accuracies are for the training data. From discussion:
The random forest approach confirms the importance of the biomarkers, but may be dataset specific, and further validation is warranted.
 
Last edited:
Back
Top Bottom