Patient Perceptions of Standardized Risk Language Used in American College of Radiology Prostate MRI PIRADS Scores.

Prostate MRI reports utilize standardized language to describe risk of clinically significant prostate cancer(csPCa) from "equivocal"(PI-RADS 3), "likely"(PI-RADS 4), to "highly-likely"(PI-RADS 5). These terms correspond to risks of 11%, 37%, and 70% according to AUA guidelines, respectively. We assessed how men perceive risk associated with standardized PI-RADS language.

We conducted a crowdsourced survey of 1,204 men matching a US prostate cancer demographic. We queried participants' risk perception associated with standardized PI-RADS language across increasing contexts: words-only, PI-RADS-sentence, full-report, and full-report-with-numeric-estimate. Median perceived risk (IQR) and absolute under/overestimation compared with AUA standards were reported. Multivariable linear mixed effects analysis identified factors associated with accuracy of risk perception.

Median perceived risks of csPCa (IQR) for the word-only context were "equivocal" 50%(50-74), "likely" 75%(68-85), and "highly-likely" 87%(78-92), corresponding to +39%, +38%, +17% overestimation, respectively. Median perceived risks for the PI-RADS-sentence context were 50%(50-50), 75%(68-81), and 90%(80-94) for PI-RADS 3,4,and 5, corresponding to +39%, +38%, +20% overestimation, respectively. Median perceived risks for the full-report context were 50%(35-70), 72%(50-80), and 84%(54-91) for PI-RADS 3,4,and 5, corresponding to +39%, +35%, +14% overestimation, respectively. For the full-report-with-numeric-estimate context describing a PI-RADS 4 lesion, median perceived risk was 70%(50-80), corresponding to +33% overestimation. Including numeric estimates increased correct perception of risk from 3% to 11% (p<0.001), driven by men with higher numeracy (OR1.24,p=0.04).

Men overestimate risk of csPCa associated with standardized PI-RADS language regardless of context, especially for PI-RADS 3 and 4 lesions. Changes to PI-RADS language or data sharing policies for imaging reports should be considered.

Journal of the American College of Radiology : JACR. 2024 Jun 14 [Epub ahead of print]

Jeremiah R Dallmer, Michael Luu, Rola Saouaf, Brennan Spiegel, Stephen J Freedland, Timothy J Daskivich

Resident, Department of Urology, Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, Los Angeles, CA., Staff Biostatistician, Department of Biostatistics, Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, Los Angeles, CA., Professor of Radiology, Department of Imaging, Cedars Sinai Medical Center, Los Angeles, CA., Professor of Medicine and Public Health, George and Dorothy Gourrich Chair in Digital Health Ethics, Director of Health Services Research, Cedars-Sinai Center for Outcomes Research and Education (CS-CORE), Department of Medicine, Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, Los Angeles, CA., Professor of Urology, Warschaw Robertson, and Law Families Chair in Prostate Cancer, Director, Center for Integrated Research in Cancer and Lifestyle (CIRCL), Associate Director of Education and Training for Cedars-Sinai Cancer, Department of Urology, Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, Los Angeles, CA., Assistant Professor of Urology, Director of Academic Urologic Oncology, Department of Urology, Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, Los Angeles, CA. Electronic address: .