Literature DB >> 31045267

Potential effect of anti-inflammatory drug use on PSA kinetics and subsequent prostate cancer diagnosis: Risk stratification in black and white men with benign prostate biopsy.

Oleksandr N Kryvenko1,2,3, Yun Wang4, Sudha Sadasivan4, Nilesh S Gupta5, Craig Rogers6, Kevin Bobbitt4, Dhananjay A Chitale1, Andrew Rundle7, Deliang Tang8, Benjamin A Rybicki4.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Rising prostate-specific antigen (PSA) levels are associated with both increased risk of prostate cancer and prostatic inflammation. The confounding effects of inflammation on the utility of PSA kinetics to predict prostate cancer may be partially mitigated by anti-inflammatory drug use. We investigated the influence of anti-inflammatory drug use on the association of PSA kinetics with prostate cancer risk.
METHODS: We studied 488 prostate cancer case-control pairs (290 white, 198 African American (AA)) nested in a retrospective cohort of men with a benign prostate biopsy. A series of multivariable models estimated prostate cancer risk associated with PSA velocity (PSAV) at different levels of anti-inflammatory drug use while adjusting for the presence of both clinical and histologic prostatitis.
RESULTS: In men with one, two, or three or more courses of anti-inflammatory drug use, for each ng/mL/year increase in PSAV, prostate cancer risk increased 1.21-fold, 1.83-fold, and 1.97-fold, respectively ( P < 0.0001). In controls with histologic prostatitis, anti-inflammatory drug use was associated with a significantly lower PSAV ( P < 0.0001). This association was not observed in men with histologic prostatitis who were subsequently diagnosed with prostate cancer. A positive interaction between anti-inflammatory drug use and PSAV-associated prostate cancer risk was only observed in AA men, as well as a strong positive association between any anti-inflammatory drug use and clinical prostatitis ( P = 0.004).
CONCLUSIONS: In men with benign prostate biopsy, accounting for the presence of histologic prostatitis and anti-inflammatory drug use, particularly in AA men, may help distinguish between men with rising PSA because of prostatitis vs undiagnosed cancer.
© 2019 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.

Entities:  

Keywords:  anti-inflammatory; benign; biopsy; effect modifier; inflammation; prostate cancer; prostate-specific antigen

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2019        PMID: 31045267      PMCID: PMC6850397          DOI: 10.1002/pros.23820

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Prostate        ISSN: 0270-4137            Impact factor:   4.104


  29 in total

1.  Racial differences in the relationship between clinical prostatitis, presence of inflammation in benign prostate and subsequent risk of prostate cancer.

Authors:  B A Rybicki; O N Kryvenko; Y Wang; M Jankowski; S Trudeau; D A Chitale; N S Gupta; A Rundle; D Tang
Journal:  Prostate Cancer Prostatic Dis       Date:  2015-12-01       Impact factor: 5.554

2.  Clinical characteristics and biopsy specimen features in African-American and white men without prostate cancer.

Authors:  J A Eastham; R A May; T Whatley; A Crow; D D Venable; O Sartor
Journal:  J Natl Cancer Inst       Date:  1998-05-20       Impact factor: 13.506

3.  Treatment of chronic prostatitis lowers serum prostate specific antigen.

Authors:  Caleb B Bozeman; Brett S Carver; James A Eastham; Dennis D Venable
Journal:  J Urol       Date:  2002-04       Impact factor: 7.450

4.  The association between prostatitis and prostate cancer. Systematic review and meta-analysis.

Authors:  Gianpaolo Perletti; Elena Monti; Vittorio Magri; Tommaso Cai; Anne Cleves; Alberto Trinchieri; Emanuele Montanari
Journal:  Arch Ital Urol Androl       Date:  2017-12-31

5.  An empirical evaluation of guidelines on prostate-specific antigen velocity in prostate cancer detection.

Authors:  Andrew J Vickers; Cathee Till; Catherine M Tangen; Hans Lilja; Ian M Thompson
Journal:  J Natl Cancer Inst       Date:  2011-02-24       Impact factor: 13.506

6.  Inflammation in prostate biopsies of men without prostatic malignancy or clinical prostatitis: correlation with total serum PSA and PSA density.

Authors:  P H Schatteman; L Hoekx; J J Wyndaele; W Jeuris; E Van Marck
Journal:  Eur Urol       Date:  2000-04       Impact factor: 20.096

7.  Cancer statistics for African Americans, 2013.

Authors:  Carol DeSantis; Deepa Naishadham; Ahmedin Jemal
Journal:  CA Cancer J Clin       Date:  2013-02-05       Impact factor: 508.702

8.  Long-term prediction of prostate cancer: prostate-specific antigen (PSA) velocity is predictive but does not improve the predictive accuracy of a single PSA measurement 15 years or more before cancer diagnosis in a large, representative, unscreened population.

Authors:  David Ulmert; Angel M Serio; Matthew F O'Brien; Charlotte Becker; James A Eastham; Peter T Scardino; Thomas Björk; Göran Berglund; Andrew J Vickers; Hans Lilja
Journal:  J Clin Oncol       Date:  2008-02-20       Impact factor: 44.544

9.  Understanding PSA and its derivatives in prediction of tumor volume: Addressing health disparities in prostate cancer risk stratification.

Authors:  Felix M Chinea; Kirill Lyapichev; Jonathan I Epstein; Deukwoo Kwon; Paul Taylor Smith; Alan Pollack; Richard J Cote; Oleksandr N Kryvenko
Journal:  Oncotarget       Date:  2017-03-28

10.  Prostatitis, sexually transmitted diseases, and prostate cancer: the California Men's Health Study.

Authors:  Iona Cheng; John S Witte; Steven J Jacobsen; Reina Haque; Virginia P Quinn; Charles P Quesenberry; Bette J Caan; Stephen K Van Den Eeden
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2010-01-15       Impact factor: 3.240

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