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)

Changes in prostate-specific antigen (PSA) have been demonstrated to accurately assess response to initial hormone deprivation in metastatic prostate cancer patients. The role of PSA in monitoring response to second-line hormonal treatment has not been documented. In a group of 20 patients with an initial response to androgen deprivation and subsequent relapse, we monitored PSA levels before and after second-line therapy. Ten patients had a clinical response. Four had a more than 90 percent decrease in serum PSA compared with the level at initial progression. This clinical response was maintained for a mean of eighteen months. Six patients had a PSA decrease less than 90 percent; their clinical response was of a mean 5.5 months. Ten patients had no change or increase in PSA. Seven had no clinical response, and 3 responded for an average of four months. Although production of PSA might be under endocrine control, changes in PSA are useful for monitoring response to second-line hormonal therapy.
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PMID:Response to second-line hormonal manipulation monitored by serum PSA in stage D2 prostate carcinoma. 137 47

Despite the controversies in management for all stages of prostatic cancer, guidelines are emerging that allow for better selection of treatments for individual patients. For early stage disease, prostate-specific antigen determinations in conjunction with other staging procedures have refined our ability to define truly organ-confined disease. The more widespread use of laparoscopic lymph node dissections has spared many patients needless laparotomies. For patients with metastatic disease, the overall effect of potency-sparing antiandrogens as monotherapy needs to be investigated. Most encouraging is that more groups are using prostate-specific antigen changes to assess disease activity and the rapid translation of recent laboratory investigations into the clinic. As our ability to predict the biologic potential of an individual patient's tumor is improved, more individualized treatment recommendations will be possible.
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PMID:Prostatic cancer: are we closer to rational treatment selection? 137 31

The goal of this study was to determine if patients with stage D0-3 prostatic adenocarcinoma have detectable hematogenous micrometastasis. Polymerase chain reaction amplification of prostate-specific antigen mRNA, which is exclusively expressed by prostatic epithelial cells, was used to detect circulating prostatic cells. Peripheral venous blood was obtained from 17 control and 12 prostate cancer patients with stage D0-3 prostatic adenocarcinoma. Of the 12 cancer cases, four patients (stage D1-3) tested positive for prostate-specific antigen RNA, indicating the presence of circulating micrometastasis. The 17 negative controls all tested negative. Contrary to a long held hypothesis, these data point to the possibility that hematogenous metastasis may be a relatively early event in the natural history of human prostate cancer. These findings may have an important impact on our understanding and treatment of prostate cancer.
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PMID:Detection of hematogenous micrometastasis in patients with prostate cancer. 138 51

We evaluated a new fully automated procedure for quantitative measurement of prostate-specific antigen (PSA) by the Microparticle Enzyme Immunoassay (MEIA) technology developed for the Abbott IMx automated immunoassay system. The performance characteristics of the Abbott IMx PSA assay (y) were evaluated and compared with those of the Hybritech Tandem-E PSA assay (x), a solid-phase two-site immunoenzymometric assay. PSA values for both assays were well correlated (r = 0.99); regression analysis yielded the equation y = 0.92x - 0.23 micrograms/L. The Abbott assay proved reliable and reproducible, as shown by the intra- and interassay coefficients of variation (2.0-3.4% and 3.1-4.7%, respectively). The assay gave a linear standard curve up to 100 micrograms/L and was very sensitive (detected PSA < 0.1 microgram/L). This analytical sensitivity was comparable with that of the Tandem-E PSA assay. Overall, the IMx PSA assay demonstrated the accuracy, precision, linearity, and intermethod correlation required for monitoring patients with prostate cancer.
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PMID:Abbott IMx evaluated for assay of prostate-specific antigen in serum. 138 93

Bone scintigraphy is the most sensitive imaging technique for the initial detection of bone metastases and is widely used in the staging of prostatic cancer. This study was performed to assess whether the development of further bone metastases can be detected by serial measurements of the serum glycoprotein prostate-specific antigen (PSA) as an alternative to follow-up scintigraphy. The bone scintigrams and PSA levels of 101 patients with metastatic prostate cancer entered into two therapeutic trials have been reviewed. Serial results of both investigations were available in 59 cases. In three cases new bone deposits were observed without a corresponding rise in PSA. In two other cases the scintigrams were considered to be suspicious of progression with no change in PSA levels; however, further follow-up indicated that these changes were not due to metastases. In 13 cases PSA levels were rising in advance of new deposits on the scintigrams. In the remaining 41 cases the PSA levels and scintigraphic findings paralleled each other. We conclude that serial estimation of PSA levels is a simpler marker for disease progression than bone scintigraphy in metastatic prostatic cancer, but that neither technique in isolation gives complete accuracy.
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PMID:Can serum prostate-specific antigen replace bone scintigraphy in the follow-up of metastatic prostatic cancer? 138 17

Serum levels of prostatic acid phosphatase (PAP) and prostate-specific antigen (PSA) were measured in 78 patients with benign prostate hyperplasia and compared with both the gland weight and the glandular component of prostatic tissue. Both PAP and PSA were significantly higher where prostate was heavier; however, we could not find a consistent factor which could correlate weight increase to marker levels. PSA tended to be higher when glandular component was more expressed. From the present findings we conclude that in patients with prostate cancer, PAP and PSA serum levels should be investigated considering also the benign components of prostate gland.
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PMID:Relationship between prostatic acid phosphatase and prostate-specific antigen serum levels and prostatic volume in benign prostate hyperplasia. Pitfall on tumor markers assessment in primary prostatic cancer? 138 28

In this study we proposed to verify sensitivity and specificity of prostate-specific antigen (PSA), digital rectal examination (DRE) and transrectal ultrasound (TRUS) in patients who referred at our institution for prostatic complaints. 141 patients, ages ranging between 55 and 86 years (mean 67.5), underwent DRE, blood PSA, TRUS and ultrasonically guided biopsy of the prostate. The comparison of the results obtained with the different diagnostic tools allowed us to draw a diagnostic algorithm for prostate cancer in symptomatic patients.
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PMID:Comparison between digital rectal examination, prostate-specific antigen and transrectal ultrasound in symptomatic patients. Results on 141 cases. 138 38

We have studied the prognostic significance of prostate-specific antigen (PSA), monitored monthly, in 24 patients with prostatic cancer (5 D1, 19 D2) on endocrine therapy. The pretreatment levels of PSA were high in all patients (mean value 41 ng/ml). It was found that PSA levels at the end of the first and sixth months of treatment were reliable prognostic indicators. At the first month evaluation PSA had decreased more than 50% from the initial values in the 16 patients with stable disease, while it had decreased less than 50% in those with progressing disease. At the end of 6 months, patients with stable disease had PSA levels within the normal range, while 8 of the patients who had progressing disease had levels higher than 10 ng/ml. Respectively 6 and 2 patients had also had increases in PSA levels at 3 and 6 months before scintigraphic demonstration of increased bone metastases.
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PMID:Prognostic significance of prostate-specific antigen in endocrine treatment for prostatic carcinoma. 138 39

Preoperative prostate-specific antigen (PSA) values were determined in 73 patients with clinically localized prostatic cancer and candidates for a radical procedure. Correlation of preoperative PSA with a final pathological stage was attempted. Only in 44.8% of our 22 patients with organ-confined disease was the PSA value within the normal range; in 17.3% of cases PSA values were higher than 20 ng/ml. 18.2% of the patients with locally advanced disease showed normal PSA values, while 45.5% had concentrations above 20 ng/ml. In the case of lymph node involvement, PSA values were normal in 22.7% of the cases. Our data indicate that no strict relationship can be suggested between PSA and the final pathological stage and grading of the tumor in patients who underwent radical prostatectomy.
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PMID:Preoperative and postoperative evaluation of prostate-specific antigen in localized prostatic cancer treated by radical prostatectomy. 138 40

Serum values of prostate-specific antigen (PSA) and prostatic acid phosphatase (PAP) were determined in 180 patients prior to pelvic lymphadenectomy and radical prostatectomy and in 40 patients prior to pelvic lymphadenectomy alone. In all tumor stages, PSA was superior to PAP in detecting cancer of the prostate. By PSA determination using a cutoff level of 4 ng/ml (Tandem assay), 28.8% of the patients with prostate cancer, stage pT2pN0M0, and 17.8% of the cases with a stage pT3pN0M0 tumor could not be detected. All these tumors had been noticed, however, by digital rectal examination. This indicates that PSA determination cannot replace digital rectal examination as a screening method for prostate cancer. In this study, it was possible neither by PSA nor by PAP to define a practicable cutoff level for patients with and without lymph node metastases. A clear differentiation between the stages pT2pN0M0 and pT3pN0M0 was not possible by either PSA or PAP alone.
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PMID:Prostate-specific antigen and prostate acid phosphatase in the detection of early prostate cancer and the prediction of regional lymph node metastases. 138 42


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