Saturday, May 26, 2007

AUA: Testosterone and PSA Intertwined in Prostate Cancer Risk

ANAHEIM, Calif., May 25 -- Testosterone levels appear to have a major influence on PSA values and may warrant watching for patients at high risk of prostate cancer, a large screening program suggests.
Higher PSA values had a near-linear association with rising testosterone levels. said Al Bareqawi, M.D., of the University of Colorado in Denver, at the American Urological Association meeting here.
The strong correlation between the two measures suggests that testosterone might have an impact on the PSA cutoff value for recommending prostate biopsy, he added.
"PSA value by itself is not perfect," said Dr. Bareqawi. "The correlation between PSA and testosterone is very much indicative of a testosterone level that may actually improve our protection against prostate cancer. It may improve the meaning and interpretation of the PSA value."
Yet the results of the study do not mean that testosterone should be measured along with PSA when screening for prostate cancer, he added. That issue needs to be resolved in a validation study that would include prostate biopsy.
The impact of testosterone levels in the setting of PSA screening remains controversial under the best of circumstances, Dr. Barqawi noted.
Androgen stimulation of the prostate likely plays a role in the development of benign prostate hypertrophy and prostate cancer. PSA values are directly related to prostate size and growth in both benign and malignant states.
So the investigators evaluated data from a national prostate screening program in an attempt to clarify the relationship between the two biomarkers,
Dr. Barqawi and colleagues reviewed PSA and testosterone values obtained from 8,794 men who participated in the program in 2004 and 2005. By linear regression analysis, testosterone as a continuous value was analyzed with respect to PSA, age, and age by PSA interaction. Testosterone values were stratified into four ordinal levels (≤150 ng/ml, N=238; 150 to 230 ng/ml, N=896; 230 to 346 ng/ml; and >346 ng/ml, N=5,159). Logistic regression was used to model testosterone level by PSA value and age.
The mean age of the study population was 60.9, and their testosterone level averaged 412.5 ng/mL. Linear and logistic regression revealed a significant positive association between PSA and testosterone values (P<0.001). The correlation remained significant after adjusting for age (P<0.001). Men in the lowest testosterone quartile had a mean PSA value of 1.35 ng/ml, which increased to 1.79 ng/mL for men in the highest testosterone quartile.
The findings clearly suggest implications for PSA testing and prostate cancer screening.
"The arbitrary PSA cutoff value for recommending a prostate biopsy is 4 ng/ml," said Dr. Barqawi. "If a patient has a PSA value of 3.9 ng/ml, for example, the physician and the patient might feel safer than they really should. We know from the Prostate Cancer Prevention Trial that PSA values of 1-2 ng/ml are associated with a 29% risk of a prostate cancer-related diagnosis. The correlation between PSA and testosterone is very much indicative that testosterone could help improve interpretation of PSA values and in the process increase the protection against prostate cancer."
University of Colorado urologist E. David Crawford, M.D., who was senior investigator in the study, said testostereone could easily be included in a standard panel of laboratory tests. Including testosterone in a panel should help hold down the cost of testing, although he emphasized that the role of testosterone in prostate cancer screening remains unclear.
Japanese investigators contributed to the debate with data indicating that testosterone measurement might help distinguish prostate cancer from BPH in at least some patients.
Hiroyoshi Suzuki, M.D., of Chiba University reported that screening test data on 420 men showed that testosterone levels did not differ between men with biopsy-proven prostate cancer and those with BPH. However, in the subset of patients with a PSA <10 ng/mL or a PSA density <0.15 ng/mLl/cc, the pretreatment testosterone level was significantly higher in men with prostate cancer than in those with benign prostate disease (P=0.0198 for PSA, P=0.0362 for PSA density).
In multivariate analysis, serum testosterone was an independent predictor of a positive biopsy in men who had baseline PSA values <10 ng/ml. Dr. Suzuki and colleagues suggested that the prostate cancer screening might be improved by adding testosterone measurement to PSA assessment.

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

Does Testosterone Cause Prostate Cancer?

See my newsletter for the answer.

Jeffrey Dach MD