W Lilleby1, E Paus, E Skovlund, S D Fosså. 1. Department of Oncology and Radiotherapy, Norwegian Radium Hospital, N-0310 Oslo, Norway. wolfgang.lilleby@klinmed.uio.no
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The prognosis of patients with localized prostate cancer depends on clinical stage, histological grade, and pretreatment prostate-specific antigen (PSA). We evaluated the additional prognostic impact of serum levels of neuron-specific enolase (NSE) and chromograninA (CgA) after curative radiotherapy and the importance of serum PSA, analyzed 3 months after irradiation. METHODS: From 1988 to 1995, 161 patients with localized T1-4, pN0M0, prostate adenocarcinoma were treated with external radiation (66Gy, 2Gy/5 fractions per week). Frozen serum samples were assessed for CgA, NSE, and PSA before and 3 months after radiotherapy. CgA was analyzed in only 100 patients. NSE and CgA were determined by a immunometric assay. Total PSA was measured by a time-resolved fluoro-immunometric assay. RESULTS: Prior to radiotherapy CgA was elevated in 16 of 100 patients, and NSE was elevated in 33 of the 161 patients. There was no association between grade, T category or pretreatment PSA and the levels of neuroendocrine markers. Pretreatment-elevated serum NSE, but not initial CgA, identified patients with an unfavorable prognosis. A < 50% reduction of PSA 3 months after radiotherapy was associated with decreased failure-free 10 years urvival. Multivariate analysis demonstrated an increased risk of failure for patients with elevated pretreatment NSE and PSA values, T3 category, and decline of PSA less than 50% 3 months after radiotherapy. The presence of none or several risk factors (1-4) defined clearly separable groups. CONCLUSIONS: Together with T category and pretreatment serum PSA values, serum NSE values before radiotherapy and decrease of serum PSA 3 months after radiotherapy represent easily assessable prognostic parameters in patients undergoing curative radiation treatment for prostate cancer. Copyright 2001 Wiley-Liss, Inc.
BACKGROUND: The prognosis of patients with localized prostate cancer depends on clinical stage, histological grade, and pretreatment prostate-specific antigen (PSA). We evaluated the additional prognostic impact of serum levels of neuron-specific enolase (NSE) and chromograninA (CgA) after curative radiotherapy and the importance of serum PSA, analyzed 3 months after irradiation. METHODS: From 1988 to 1995, 161 patients with localized T1-4, pN0M0, prostate adenocarcinoma were treated with external radiation (66Gy, 2Gy/5 fractions per week). Frozen serum samples were assessed for CgA, NSE, and PSA before and 3 months after radiotherapy. CgA was analyzed in only 100 patients. NSE and CgA were determined by a immunometric assay. Total PSA was measured by a time-resolved fluoro-immunometric assay. RESULTS: Prior to radiotherapy CgA was elevated in 16 of 100 patients, and NSE was elevated in 33 of the 161 patients. There was no association between grade, T category or pretreatment PSA and the levels of neuroendocrine markers. Pretreatment-elevated serum NSE, but not initial CgA, identified patients with an unfavorable prognosis. A < 50% reduction of PSA 3 months after radiotherapy was associated with decreased failure-free 10 years urvival. Multivariate analysis demonstrated an increased risk of failure for patients with elevated pretreatment NSE and PSA values, T3 category, and decline of PSA less than 50% 3 months after radiotherapy. The presence of none or several risk factors (1-4) defined clearly separable groups. CONCLUSIONS: Together with T category and pretreatment serum PSA values, serum NSE values before radiotherapy and decrease of serum PSA 3 months after radiotherapy represent easily assessable prognostic parameters in patients undergoing curative radiation treatment for prostate cancer. Copyright 2001 Wiley-Liss, Inc.
Authors: Xuehong Deng; Bennett D Elzey; Jean M Poulson; Wallace B Morrison; Song-Chu Ko; Noah M Hahn; Timothy L Ratliff; Chang-Deng Hu Journal: Am J Cancer Res Date: 2011-08-18 Impact factor: 6.166