Sommige mannen met lage PSA waarden hebben toch prostaatkanker.*
Ca.15% van de mannen met een PSA waarde lager dan 4,0 ng/ml
hebben toch prostaatkanker, doch het goede nieuws is dat in 98% van deze
gevallen het om kankers gaat die niet agressief zijn en zeer traag groeien zodat
die klinisch eigenlijk van geen waarde zijn.
Men with low PSA (prostate
specific antigen) levels on screening tests can still have prostate cancer,
according to a study* released today by scientists from the National Cancer
Institute (NCI), part of the National Institutes of Health, and the Southwest
Oncology Group, an NCI-funded network of researchers. In this study, prostate
cancers were detected by biopsy in men with normal PSA levels.
The good news is that the vast
majority of these cancers were low and intermediate grade, which often are not
clinically significant," said Leslie Ford, M.D., associate director for
clinical research in NCI's Division of Cancer Prevention, who participated in
the research.
"This was the first
systematic study of men with PSA levels from 0 to 4 nanograms per milliliter
(ng/ml). It shows that cancer of the prostate can be present in men with
'normal' PSAs," said Ian Thompson, M.D., University of Texas Health Science
Center at San Antonio, who led the study. Doctors often use the value of 4.0
ng/ml or greater as the trigger for further investigation, such as a prostate
biopsy. A PSA level below 4.0 is generally considered normal.
Prostate cancer clinicians
often say that men are much more likely to die with prostate cancer than from
it. According to recent autopsy studies, many men over age 50 have early,
undiagnosed prostate cancer. Clinicians concur that most early cancers remain
harmless, though some may progress to clinically significant disease.
The 2,950 men in this study
were from the "control arm" of the Prostate Cancer Prevention Trial
(PCPT), an NCI-funded study that found in 2003 that the drug finasteride reduced
by 25 percent a man's chances of getting prostate cancer.
Men in the control arm were
given a placebo, or sugar pill, instead of finasteride and, like the men on the
finasteride arm, received annual prostate screening for seven years with a PSA
test and a digital rectal exam (DRE). All men in PCPT entered the trial at age
55 or above, had an initial PSA level of 3 ng/ml or less, and a normal DRE. All
were asked to undergo an end-of-study prostate biopsy. The report released today
focused on men at low risk of having prostate cancer末the 2,950 men on the
placebo arm who had normal DREs and PSAs less than or equal to 4 ng/ml for the
seven-year study duration.
Since the late 1980s, PSA
tests have been widely used in the United States in an attempt to detect
prostate cancer at an early stage. However, PSA testing has never been proven to
reduce the risk of dying from prostate cancer. Not all prostate cancer detected
by PSA screening is clinically relevant and, therefore, screening carries a risk
of "over-diagnosing" the disease, which could lead to unnecessary
surgery or radiation therapy. Thus, PSA testing is not a universally recommended
screening procedure. An ongoing NCI study is addressing the issue of whether PSA
screening reduces the risk of death from prostate cancer.
"The main study finding
was that 15 percent of the men in the PCPT control arm had a positive end-of
study biopsy despite having PSA levels below 4 ng/ml and normal DREs throughout
the study," said Thompson.
Importantly, the study also
found that only 2.3 percent of men in the PCPT control arm with PSA levels of 4
ng/ml or less had high-grade cancers. For men with a PSA of 2 or lower, the
chance of having a high-grade cancer was even lower末1.4 percent. Grade was
measured by Gleason score, a system that ranks tumors from 2 to 10 based on
their appearance under the microscope. High-grade tumors末Gleason scores of
7 to 10末often grow more quickly and may be more likely to spread than
lower-grade tumors.
Gleason scores of the highest
grades末8 or 9末were found in only seven participants, or 0.2 percent of
men in the PCPT control arm. Most of the men with prostate cancer, 349 of them
(78 percent), had Gleason scores of 5 or 6.
"Most of these men would
not have been diagnosed if they had not taken part in this study, since biopsies
are not routinely performed in men with such low PSA levels," said Ford.
"We need better methods
to distinguish the harmless, slow-growing cancers from the more aggressive
ones," continued Ford. "If more biopsies are performed at lower PSA
levels, more cancers will be found and treated. But some men would undergo
treatment, and the risks associated with it, for tumors that would never have
been clinically significant."
Treatment for prostate cancer
can sometimes lead to impotence, urinary incontinence, and other problems,
causing a substantial health burden for men.
"Lowering the PSA
threshold for proceeding to prostate biopsy would increase the risks of
overdiagnosing and overtreating clinically unimportant disease," said
Thompson.
NCI-funded researchers are
looking for ways to determine which men harbor aggressive tumors. The NCI Early
Detection Research Network (EDRN) has a Prostate Collaborative Group, which is
applying a variety of strategies to find ways to detect prostate cancer early.
Some scientists are using the new tools of genomics and proteomics to look at
how gene expression patterns and proteins in the blood may differ in men with
aggressive tumors vs. those with slow-growing ones.
"There is a great need
for methods, beyond tumor grade, to better predict which men have prostate
cancers requiring treatment," said Thompson.
Prostate cancer is the most common cancer in men, after skin cancer. It estimated that approximately 230,110 men in the United States will be diagnosed with the disease this year, and about 30,000 men will die from it. (mei 2004)