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PSA testing can
predict advanced Prostate Cancer
Newswise — A single
prostate specific antigen (PSA) test taken
before the age of 50 can be used to predict
advanced prostate cancer in men up to 25
years in advance of a diagnosis, according
to a new study published by researchers at
Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center in
New York and Lund University in Sweden.
The findings, published
in the online open- access journal BMC
Medicine, should help physicians be able to
identify men who would benefit from
intensive prostate cancer screenings over
their lifetime.
Previously, the team’s
research has shown that a single PSA test at
age 50 or younger could predict the presence
of prostate cancer in men up to 25 years in
advance of diagnosis.
“This latest study is a
unique, natural experiment to test whether
we can predict advanced prostate cancer many
years before it is diagnosed,” said lead
author Hans Lilja, MD, PhD, a clinical
chemist with joint appointments in the
Departments of Surgery and Medicine at MSKCC.
Prostate cancer is the
most common cancer in American men after
lung cancer.
This year, more than
230,000 new cases will be diagnosed, and
according to the American Cancer Society,
more than 27,000 men died from prostate
cancer in 2006.
The findings are based
on the research team’s analysis of blood
samples collected between 1974 and 1986 as
part of a large, population-based study of
middle aged men called the Malmö
Preventative Medicine study.
The study cohort, in
Malmö, Sweden, included 161 men who had been
diagnosed with advanced prostate cancer by
1999 and men of a similar age who had not
developed cancer by that time.
The results showed that
the total PSA level was an accurate
predictor of advanced cancer diagnosis in
men later in life.
The majority, 66
percent, of advanced cancers were seen in
men whose PSA levels were in the top 20
percent (total PSA > 0.9 ng/ml). The average
length of time from blood test to cancer
diagnosis was 17 years.
While this data does
not have any immediate implications for
general prostate cancer screening
guidelines, Dr. Lilja adds, “We have found
that a single PSA test taken at or before
age 50 is a very strong predictor of
advanced prostate cancer diagnosed up to 25
years later.
"This
suggests the possibility of using an early
PSA test determine which men should be the
focus of the most intensive screening
efforts.”
Vigilant, targeted
screenings in high- risk men could allow
physicians to intervene when the cancer is
at an early stage.
The research was funded
by grants from the National Cancer
Institute, the Swedish Cancer Society, and
the European Union Sixth Framework Program.
Dr. Hans Lilja holds patents for free PSA
and hK2 assays.
Memorial Sloan-Kettering
Cancer Center is the world’s oldest and
largest private institution devoted to
prevention, patient care, research, and
education in cancer.
Our scientists and
clinicians generate innovative approaches to
better understand, diagnose, and treat
cancer.
Our specialists are
leaders in biomedical research and in
translating the latest research to advance
the standard of cancer care worldwide. For
more information, go to
http://www.mskcc.org.
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