| Literature DB >> 23418500 |
Sandra L Mejak1, Julianne Bayliss, Shayne D Hanks.
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: To investigate whether bicycle riding alters total prostate-specific antigen (tPSA) serum concentrations in healthy older men.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23418500 PMCID: PMC3572135 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0056030
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Summary of methodology and results of previous studies analyzing the effect of cycling on PSA.
| Age >50 y | Longer distance | Post test within 1 h | PSA Increased with cycling | No change in PSA with cycling | |
| Saka 2009 | No | Yes | Yes | X | |
| Hermann 2004 | No | Yes | Yes | X | |
| Swain 1997 | No (a few>50 y) | Yes | Yes | X | |
| Banfia 1997 | No | No | Yes | X | |
| Lippi 2005 | No | Not comparable | Not comparable | X | |
| Safford 2006 | No/Yes | Yes | No (unclear) | X (≥50 y age group) | X (overall) |
| Luboldt 2003 | Yes | Yes | Yes | X | |
| Kindermann 2011 | Yes | Yes | Yes | X | |
| Oremek 1996 | No/Yes | No | Yes | X |
Normal ranges for tPSA in ng/ml [37].
| Age range (years) | 50th percentile (median) | 95th percentile (upper limit of normal) |
|
| 0.85 | 3.0 |
|
| 1.39 | 4.0 |
|
| 1.64 | 5.5 |
Figure 1Univariate linear regression of age vs tPSA change (log transformed).
Independent risk factors associated with increased tPSA levels.
| Relative Risk | 95% confidence interval | p vale | |
| Age | 0.018 | 0.0117–0.0253 | <0.0001 |
| Distance cycled | 0.0009 | −0.0000–0.002 | 0.07 |
Model p<0.001; R2 = 0.202).
Summary of tPSA results and follow-up, in participants with an elevated tPSA in either the pre- or post-ride test.
| Subject age | Pre-ride tPSA | Post-ride tPSA | Follow-up (PSA values = ng/ml) |
| 52 years | 3.07 | 2.37 | After the study was diagnosed with prostatitis, and later BPH (both symptomatic). Medications for BPH cleared all symptoms. PSA since treatment has sat below upper limit of normal. |
| 54 years | 3.87 | 4.03 | Symptom free. No further PSA tests done. |
| 54 years | 4.66 | 4.51 | Diagnosed with a urinary tract infection around the time of the testing. Repeat PSA 22 m later 1.29 ng/ml. |
| 57 years | 1.36 | 3.03 | Symptom free. No further PSA tests done. |
| 59 years | 3.40 | 3.78 | Lost to follow-up. |
| 62 years | 13.26 | 22.01 | 5 y prior to the study, elevated tPSA, negative prostate biopsy, and negative MRI. One month post-study: tPSA 9.2 ng/ml with normal MRI but refused biopsy, 18 months post study tPSA 9.6 ng/ml. |
| 62 years | 1.94 | 4.22 | Symptom free. Repeat PSA 3 m and 2 y later (3.6, 1.8 ng/ml respectively). |
| 63 years | 1.60 | 5.09 | Symptom-free. Regular PSA tests within normal range. |
| 64 years | 2.41 | 4.71 | Lost to follow-up |
PSA considered elevated when using the standard PSA normal range cut-off of 4.0 ng/ml.
PSA considered elevated when using the age-based normal ranges (Table 2).