| Literature DB >> 16910583 |
Sachiyo Nishida1, Naoya Masumori, Fumimasa Fukuta, Atsushi Takahashi, Naoki Itoh, Taiji Tsukamoto.
Abstract
Of 227 men with a negative initial biopsy, the clinical course of 99 men who could be regularly followed using prostate specific antigen (PSA) determination was retrospectively analyzed. A repeat biopsy was recommended if the men showed persistent elevation of PSA > 10 ng/ml, PSA velocity (PSAV) > 0.75 ng/ml/year, or persistent abnormality on digital rectal examination and/or transrectal ultrasonography. A repeat biopsy was performed on 43 men. Because of the indication for a repeat biopsy, the PSAV of the 43 men who received a repeat biopsy was higher than that of the 56 men who did not. Clinically organ-confined cancer was detected in 18 patients (detection rate 41.9%). The patients having cancer had a higher PSAV (median 1.950) than those without the disease (median 0.900). Of 19 men aged 75 years and older at the initial biopsy, a repeat biopsy revealed organ-confined cancers in 4 out of 10 men. During follow-up of the 19 elderly men, 11 developed co-morbid illnesses such as cerebral infarction, ischemic heart diseases and other malignancies, and 4 died of the diseases. Thus, PSAV seems to be the best parameter for a repeat biopsy. Elderly men may not benefit from a repeat biopsy because they are unlikely to have lethal prostate cancer and highly likely to develop co-morbid illness that would affect their life-span.Entities:
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Year: 2006 PMID: 16910583
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Hinyokika Kiyo ISSN: 0018-1994