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Prostate-specific antigen velocity in a prospective prostate cancer screening study of men with genetic predisposition

Authors :
Mikropoulos, Christos
Selkirk, Christina G. Hutten
Saya, Sibel
Bancroft, Elizabeth
Vertosick, Emily
Dadaev, Tokhir
Brendler, Charles
Page, Elizabeth
Dias, Alexander
Evans, D. Gareth
Rothwell, Jeanette
Maehle, Lovise
Axcrona, Karol
Richardson, Kate
Eccles, Diana
Jensen, Thomas
Osther, Palle J.
van Asperen, Christi J.
Vasen, Hans
Kiemeney, Lambertus A.
Ringelberg, Janneke
Cybulski, Cezary
Wokolorczyk, Dominika
Hart, Rachel
Glover, Wayne
Lam, Jimmy
Taylor, Louise
Salinas, Monica
Feliubadalo, Lidia
Oldenburg, Rogier
Cremers, Ruben
Verhaegh, Gerald
van Zelst-Stams, Wendy A.
Oosterwijk, Jan C.
Cook, Jackie
Rosario, Derek J.
Buys, Saundra S.
Conner, Tom
Domchek, Susan
Powers, Jacquelyn
Ausems, Margreet G. E. M.
Teixeira, Manuel R.
Maia, Sofia
Izatt, Louise
Schmutzler, Rita
Rhiem, Kerstin
Foulkes, William D.
Boshari, Talia
Davidson, Rosemarie
Ruijs, Marielle
van den Enden, Apollonia
Eeles, Rosalind A.
MUMC+: DA KG Polikliniek (9)
RS: FHML non-thematic output
Source :
British Journal of Cancer, 118(2), 266-276. Nature Publishing Group
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

Background: Prostate-specific antigen (PSA) and PSA-velocity (PSAV) have been used to identify men at risk of prostate cancer (PrCa). The IMPACT study is evaluating PSA screening in men with a known genetic predisposition to PrCa due to BRCA1/2 mutations. This analysis evaluates the utility of PSA and PSAV for identifying PrCa and high-grade disease in this cohort. Methods: PSAV was calculated using logistic regression to determine if PSA or PSAV predicted the result of prostate biopsy (PB) in men with elevated PSA values. Cox regression was used to determine whether PSA or PSAV predicted PSA elevation in men with low PSAs. Interaction terms were included in the models to determine whether BRCA status influenced the predictiveness of PSA or PSAV. Results: 1634 participants had >= 3 PSA readings of whom 174 underwent PB and 45 PrCas diagnosed. In men with PSA >3.0 ng ml(-1), PSAV was not significantly associated with presence of cancer or high-grade disease. PSAV did not add to PSA for predicting time to an elevated PSA. When comparing BRCA1/2 carriers to non-carriers, we found a significant interaction between BRCA status and last PSA before biopsy (P = 0.031) and BRCA2 status and PSAV (P = 0.024). However, PSAV was not predictive of biopsy outcome in BRCA2 carriers. Conclusions: PSA is more strongly predictive of PrCa in BRCA carriers than non-carriers. We did not find evidence that PSAV aids decision-making for BRCA carriers over absolute PSA value alone.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00070920
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
British Journal of Cancer, 118(2), 266-276. Nature Publishing Group
Accession number :
edsair.narcis........aff716905653caa6176fc561bf438653