Literature DB >> 7531773

Prostate-specific antigen as predictor of prostate cancer in black men and white men.

A S Whittemore1, C Lele, G D Friedman, T Stamey, J H Vogelman, N Orentreich.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: The increasing incidence of prostate cancer creates complex issues in health care management and cost containment. There is a need to evaluate serial measurements of prostate-specific antigen (PSA) as a marker for long-term risk of clinically important prostate cancer (stages B through D).
PURPOSE: We used a nested case-control design within a retrospective cohort study to evaluate serial PSA concentrations in relation to subsequent prostate cancer diagnoses.
METHODS: Participants included 40 black and 96 white men with subsequent diagnoses of prostate cancer and 84 black and 100 white men without such diagnoses (control subjects) in a multiphasic health screening program conducted by the Kaiser Permanente Medical Care Program of Northern California. Serial serum samples were collected 1.5-23 years before prostate cancer diagnosis.
RESULTS: Median serum PSA concentrations, specific for age and subsequent cancer status, were similar in blacks and whites. Concentrations in control subjects increased exponentially with age, with a doubling time of 24.9 years. Concentrations in men with stage A cancer were similar to those in control subjects. Until about 13 years before diagnosis, PSA in men with subsequent cancer stages B through D increased exponentially with age, with a doubling time similar to that of control subjects. Thereafter, the PSA concentrations increased exponentially, with a doubling time of 4.3 years. Rapid increase in PSA concentration started about 1.5 years earlier for men with stage D cancer than for men with stage B or C cancer. The single PSA measurement drawn closest to diagnosis was a more sensitive marker of stages B through D cancer within the next 7 years than was any index of change that also took account of earlier PSA readings.
CONCLUSIONS: These data suggest that 1) age-specific PSA concentrations are similar in black men and white men and 2) current PSA concentration, specific for age, outperforms changes in past concentrations in identifying the man who will develop stage B, C, or D cancer within 7 years, albeit at the cost of a slightly higher rate of false-positive results. This interpretation needs confirmation in other data containing many serial PSA measurements within a few years of diagnosis.

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Year:  1995        PMID: 7531773     DOI: 10.1093/jnci/87.5.354

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Natl Cancer Inst        ISSN: 0027-8874            Impact factor:   13.506


  20 in total

1.  Prediction of gene function by genome-scale expression analysis: prostate cancer-associated genes.

Authors:  M G Walker; W Volkmuth; E Sprinzak; D Hodgson; T Klingler
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2.  Calibrating disease progression models using population data: a critical precursor to policy development in cancer control.

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Journal:  Biostatistics       Date:  2010-06-07       Impact factor: 5.899

3.  Screening for prostate cancer using multivariate mixed-effects models.

Authors:  Christopher H Morrell; Larry J Brant; Shan Sheng; E Jeffrey Metter
Journal:  J Appl Stat       Date:  2012-06-01       Impact factor: 1.404

4.  Predicting prostate cancer many years before diagnosis: how and why?

Authors:  Andrew J Vickers; Hans Lilja
Journal:  World J Urol       Date:  2011-11-20       Impact factor: 4.226

5.  Lead time and overdiagnosis in prostate-specific antigen screening: importance of methods and context.

Authors:  Gerrit Draisma; Ruth Etzioni; Alex Tsodikov; Angela Mariotto; Elisabeth Wever; Roman Gulati; Eric Feuer; Harry de Koning
Journal:  J Natl Cancer Inst       Date:  2009-03-10       Impact factor: 13.506

6.  [Survival of patients diagnosed with prostate cancer and monitored in primary care].

Authors:  Gabriel J Díaz Grávalos; Gerardo Palmeiro Fernández; Inmaculada Casado Górriz; Margarita Arandia García; Susana Alvarez Araújo; Mónica González Dacosta
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7.  Evaluation of new technologies for cancer control based on population trends in disease incidence and mortality.

Authors:  Ruth Etzioni; Isabelle Durand-Zaleski; Iris Lansdorp-Vogelaar
Journal:  J Natl Cancer Inst Monogr       Date:  2013

Review 8.  Minireview: the molecular and genomic basis for prostate cancer health disparities.

Authors:  Isaac J Powell; Aliccia Bollig-Fischer
Journal:  Mol Endocrinol       Date:  2013-04-22

9.  Baseline Prostate-Specific Antigen Levels in Midlife Predict Lethal Prostate Cancer.

Authors:  Mark A Preston; Julie L Batista; Kathryn M Wilson; Sigrid V Carlsson; Travis Gerke; Daniel D Sjoberg; Douglas M Dahl; Howard D Sesso; Adam S Feldman; Peter H Gann; Adam S Kibel; Andrew J Vickers; Lorelei A Mucci
Journal:  J Clin Oncol       Date:  2016-06-13       Impact factor: 44.544

10.  Men (aged 40-49 years) with a single baseline prostate-specific antigen below 1.0 ng/mL have a very low long-term risk of prostate cancer: results from a prospectively screened population cohort.

Authors:  Christopher J Weight; Simon P Kim; Debra J Jacobson; Michaela E McGree; R Jeffrey Karnes; Jennifer St Sauver
Journal:  Urology       Date:  2013-10-19       Impact factor: 2.649

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