Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0376358 (prostate cancer)
59,338 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Hematological and biochemical parameters were evaluated in 31 patients receiving 150 MBq 89Strontium (89Sr) intravenously due to painful skeletal metastases from hormone resistant prostate cancer. Two and 3 months after the injection prostate specific antigen (PSA) had increased by a median of 36% and 100%, respectively, as compared to the pretreatment value whereas alkaline phosphatase (APHOS) had decreased by about 20% (median). The leucocyte and platelet counts were reduced by about 20-35%, without reaching grade greater than or equal to 2 toxicity. Pain relief was reported in 14 of 29 evaluable patients at 2 months and in 11 of 23 patients at 3 months. It is concluded that 89Sr represents a worthwhile therapeutic modality in the palliation treatment of patients with hormone resistant prostate cancer, though the biological significance of frequently increasing PSA and decreasing APHOS is not yet completely understood.
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PMID:89Strontium in bone metastases from hormone resistant prostate cancer: palliation effect and biochemical changes. 137 58

Twenty-seven of 152 patients (18%) with progressing hormone resistant prostate cancer had normal serum levels of prostate specific antigen (PSA less than or equal to 10 micrograms l-1), when referred for secondary treatment. PSA was significantly correlated with the extent of skeletal metastases (R: 0.35) and the levels of hemoglobin (R: -0.19) and serum alkaline phosphatase (R: 0.30). In a multivariate Cox regression analysis the survival of the 152 patients was not correlated with the PSA level but with the patients performance status, the level of hemoglobin, and the time between primary hormone treatment and relapse. The lack of serum PSA to predict survival may be explained by a heterogenous composition of hormone resistant prostate cancer as regards differentiated and/or PSA producing vs undifferentiated and/or PSA non-producing cells.
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PMID:The prognostic significance of prostate specific antigen in metastatic hormone-resistant prostate cancer. 137 59

For 105 patients with locoregional carcinoma of the prostate, prostate specific antigen (PSA) levels were evaluated before, during and after external beam radiotherapy. The median follow-up is 17 months. In 51 patients (48.5%) initial PSA levels exceeded the maximum normal value of 20 ng/ml. Nine patients kept non-declining high levels just after radiotherapy. Only one of these is free of disease. Assuming PSA levels decrease exponentially during radiotherapy, a mean half-life of 62 days (median 54, SD 26 days) was calculated. Three out of five patients with a PSA half-life of more than 88 days relapsed as compared to a 8% (3/37) relapse rate in patients with a "normal" half-life. Prolonged PSA half-life suggests residual disease. PSA levels are expected to further decrease after radiation. Six months after irradiation persistent high PSA levels were found in 14/51 (27.5%) patients. Only four of them had no evidence of manifest disease. Important negative prognostic factors for disease control in our series were non-declining high levels of PSA, a PSA serum half-life exceeding 88 days and persistence of elevated PSA values longer than six months after treatment. In our opinion, PSA is a valuable marker in the follow-up of prostate cancer patients during and after radiotherapy.
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PMID:Prostate specific antigen levels during and after external beam radiotherapy for localized carcinoma of the prostate: predictor of therapeutic efficacy. 137 47

The clinical application of 84 prostate specific antigen (PSA) and prostatic acid phosphatase (PAP) measurements for the follow-up of 36 patients with treated prostate cancer was retrospectively examined by case study. Clinicians use several risk markers including serum levels of PSA and PAP to monitor prostate cancer progression or stability. These results of PAP and PSA tests were either utilized during the patient's clinical assessment or they were disregarded. In either case, the results would support or counter the physician's clinical decision for patient management. After predictive value analysis it was concluded that measurement of PSA alone is more useful than parallel measurements of PSA and PAP, when utilized together with standard criteria for assessing treated prostate cancer patients.
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PMID:Prostate specific antigen and prostatic acid phosphatase measurements for the follow-up of patients with prostate cancer. 138 Feb 23

Serum prostate specific antigen (PSA) values detected by DELFIA PSA were evaluated for usefulness in the diagnosis and follow-up of patients with prostate cancer. The system is time-resolved fluoroimmunoassay using europium as a tracer, which has a detectable range of 0.10-500 ng/ml with a small sample volume (25 microliters) and reliable quality control data. Furthermore, serum PSA values detected by the assay were equivocal to those detected by Tandem-R PSA. From the mean +3 S.D. of serum PSA values obtained on 227 normal males, 1.98 ng/ml was decided as an upper normal level. Serum PSA values in benign prostatic hyperplasia (BPH) (n = 69) and prostate cancer (n = 86) patients were statistically higher than those in normal males. However, when 1.98 ng/ml was used as a cut-off value, the false positive rate in BPH cases elevated up to 80%. Therefore, in the differential diagnosis of prostate cancer and BPH, we recommend 11.7 ng/ml (mean + S.D. in BPH cases) as a cut-off value, in which sensitivity is 72.1%, 88.4% are true negative in BPH, and efficacy is 79.4%. Serially determined serum PSA values in following up the patients with prostate cancer were confirmed to be highly effective for diagnosing recurrence and evaluating treatment responses. These findings suggest that DELFIA PSA is a useful tool for determination of serum PSA values.
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PMID:[Measurement of serum PSA values by DELFIA PSA and its clinical significance on diagnosis and follow-up of prostate cancer patients]. 138 83

A total of 28 untreated patients with asymptomatic, stage D prostate cancer was randomized in a double-blinded fashion to receive finasteride (10 mg. per day), a 5 alpha-reductase inhibitor or placebo. Patients were evaluated at 3-week intervals by rectal examination, and serum prostate specific antigen (PSA) and prostatic acid phosphatase (PAP) levels, and at 6-week intervals by bone scan and transrectal ultrasound determinations of prostatic volume. Patients stopped the medication at week 6 at the discretion of the investigator when PSA levels increased from baseline. After 12 weeks all patients were reevaluated. Of the patients 13 received finasteride and 15 received placebo. The 2 groups did not differ statistically with respect to patient age, initial PSA and PAP level, or the extent of metastases on initial bone scan. A statistically significant decrease in the median percentage change from baseline in PSA at weeks 3 and 6 occurred in the finasteride group compared to the placebo group (-22.9% versus -2.9% and -15.1% versus +11.7%, respectively, p less than 0.05). Finasteride had no effect upon PAP, serum testosterone, prostatic volume or appearance of bone scans. A decrease in serum PSA in the finasteride treatment group suggests that finasteride exerts a minor effect in patients with prostate cancer. This effect does not approach that seen with medical or surgical castration yet because of the potency preserving feature and the lack of toxicity finasteride may warrant further study in the treatment of prostate cancer.
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PMID:Multicenter, randomized, double-blind, placebo controlled study to investigate the effect of finasteride (MK-906) on stage D prostate cancer. 138 74

The ability of serum prostate specific antigen (PSA) to predict bone metastases at initial presentation was determined in 146 patients, and in 66 patients during a 3-year period; 14.7% of patients with bone metastases at presentation had a PSA value less than 20 ng/ml. All patients who subsequently developed bone metastases had a PSA greater than 20 ng/ml and the rise in PSA often antedated the detection of bone metastases. Bone scans are still necessary in the initial staging but following diagnosis and treatment can be replaced by serum PSA measurement in monitoring patients with prostatic cancer.
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PMID:Prostate specific antigen and bone scan correlation in the staging and monitoring of patients with prostatic cancer. 138 20

The ability of serum prostate specific antigen (PSA) and serum acid phosphatase (SAP) to identify skeletal spread was evaluated in untreated patients with prostatic cancer. Twenty patients with scintigraphic evidence of metastatic disease in bone (M1) at diagnosis were compared with 50 untreated patients in whom scans were repeatedly negative during long-term surveillance. Using the present laboratory upper limit of normal (ULN) of 3 iu/l, the sensitivity and specificity of SAP for M1 disease were 80 and 86% respectively. Stepwise discriminant analysis demonstrated that SAP was able to stage patients correctly (bone scan positive or negative) with 81% predictive accuracy at an optimum cut-off limit of 4.6 iu/l. By contrast, whilst PSA (Hybritech) was 100% sensitive for skeletal disease at 10 ng/ml--at the expense of poor (36%) specificity--analysis determined that an optimum cut-off limit of 58 ng/ml led to 79% predictive accuracy for disease in bone. It was concluded that PSA levels > 58 ng/ml are highly indicative of spread to the skeleton, even in the absence of radiological or scintigraphic evidence of metastases.
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PMID:Levels of prostate specific antigen that predict skeletal spread in prostate cancer. 138 21

The seasonal pattern of prostatic acid phosphatase (PAP) and prostate specific antigen (PSA) in nonmalignant males was investigated. Serum levels were measured in 1,540 men during a 3-year period with radioimmunoassay methods using monoclonal antibody techniques. All of the tested individuals were free of prostatic malignancy. During each of the 3 years, PAP ans PSA showed a rise, especially in spring. The mean PSA level in spring showed a statistically important difference when compared with winter, fall and summer mean levels (p less than 0.05). However, no significant difference of PAP levels was estimated seasonally in the 3 years, which shows that an important marker of prostatic cancer can vary with seasons.
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PMID:Seasonal variation of prostatic acid phosphate and prostate-specific antigen in patients without prostatic malignancy. 138 29

Laparoscopic pelvic lymphadenectomy is a newly developed technique of lymph node dissection in patients with malignancy of the pelvic organs. Three patients with localized prostatic cancer underwent laparoscopic pelvic lymphadenectomy. The patients were 77 years old with stage C disease, 73 with stage B1, and 65 with stage A2. Five to ten lymph nodes were removed from each patient after laparoscopic procedures lasting 220 to 270 minutes. There were no complications during the procedures and their convalescence was uneventful. All lymph nodes were negative by pathological examination and a radical retropubic prostatectomy was done 2 weeks after the lymphadenectomy in two patients. The other patient was treated with external radiotherapy and bilateral orchiectomy. Patients with stage C cancer, a high serum level of prostate specific antigen or a high grade tumor are the best candidates for this less invasive staging procedure. The disadvantage of this procedure is long operation time and complications due to CO2 pneumoperitoneum.
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PMID:[Laparoscopic pelvic lymphadenectomy in patients with localized prostate cancer]. 138 21


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