Tuesday, March 31, 2009

The AUA Weighs in on the PSA Testing Discussion

The AUA released the following statement on March 26, 2009. As noted, the statement is attributal to Dr. John Barry, AUA president. As a prostate cancer survivor focused on early detection and treatment, this seems a very balanced statement. Your comments?

AUA STATEMENT ABOUT PROSTATE-SPECIFIC ANTIGEN TESTING

The statement below is attributable to Dr. John Barry, president of the American Urological Association. This statement is being issued in response to two studies recently published in the New England Journal of Medicine about prostate-specific antigen (PSA) testing.

The American Urological Association has read with great interest the coverage surrounding the two studies about prostate-specific antigen (PSA) testing recently published in the New England Journal of Medicine, and is concerned about the alarm these two studies have raised with patients. The decision to screen for prostate cancer is a personal one that a man should make in conjunction with his physician or urologist. Because most cancers need to be caught in their earliest stages to achieve the best outcome for the patient, disparaging the PSA test puts men — particularly with certain risk profiles — at risk for life-threatening disease. Prior to the use of the PSA test, tumors were found mostly in advanced — and less treatable — stages, giving patients far fewer options for treatment. These studies, as well as the 2008 United States Preventive Services Task Force recommendation that men stop PSA testing after the age of 75, have potential for harm if they are not explained clearly to patients or reviewed in the context of the full debate on PSA. It is the opinion of the AUA that the PSA test is a valuable screening tool that saves lives — and men with concerns about elevated PSA scores should consult their urologists about next steps.

These two studies do not clearly assert that PSA testing causes more harm than benefit. In one of the two studies, 52 percent of men in the “non-screened” arm had recent PSA tests, thus enriching the non-screened arm with men who had normal PSA levels and reducing the chance for prostate cancer death in this arm of the study. This means that more than half of the men in the non-screening arm of the study were screened, making it difficult to demonstrate a difference. In the other study, there was actually a 20 percent reduction in death from prostate cancer with a relatively short follow-up of only nine years. This is an important point. The benefit of screening may not be demonstrable until significantly longer follow up is reached for both trials. These studies therefore do not lead to the conclusion that PSA screening should be abandoned.

Men who are concerned about these studies should talk with their urologists about their particular risk profile and whether regular PSA testing is best for them.

The AUA is presently finalizing a new Best Practice Statement about prostate-specific antigen testing that will be unveiled during our upcoming Annual Meeting. These studies are being addressed in more detail in the Statement, but do not change the AUA’s position that PSA is a valuable screening tool and should be appropriately offered to men. This document will be made available to the public in April.

About the American Urological Association: Founded in 1902 and headquartered near Baltimore, Maryland, the American Urological Association is the pre-eminent professional organization for urologists, with more than 15,000 members throughout the world. An educational nonprofit organization, the AUA pursues its mission of fostering the highest standards of urologic care by carrying out a wide variety of programs for members and their patients, including UrologyHealth.org, an award-winning on-line patient education resource, and the American Urological Association Foundation, Inc.

PCA3. Another Potential Tool?

The ongoing debate over the value and validity of the PSA test continues. The following article comes from a respected source in the United Kingdom. From the prostate cancer survivor side of the issue, we read many, many accounts of lives saved through detection by PSA testing. We still don't know how many of the approximately 29,000 men who die each year from prostate cancer did or did not have a PSA test and what stage they were at when diagnosed. Until there are significantly improved testing protocols that can identify prostate cancer and predict which will be aggressive, it is important that we continue to educate men about this dangerous disease and to provide them with the knowledge and tools to intelligently participate in their individual prostate cancer risk management program. The original article can be found at http://www.prostateuk.org/prostatenews/20090305_article_pca3.rsk.htm.

PROSTATE CANCER DIAGNOSIS: STRENGTHS AND WEAKNESSES OF PROSTATE-SPECIFIC ANTIGEN AND THE DISCOVERY AND CLINICAL EVALUATION OF PROSTATE CANCER GENE 3 (PCA3)

Article by: Professor Roger Kirby, Chairman, Prostate UK

Roger Kirby

Summary
Prostate biopsy decisions are traditionally guided by digital rectal examination and measurement of serum total prostate specific antigen (tPSA). However, both techniques are subject to inherent weaknesses. Prostate cancer gene 3 (PCA3), a gene-based marker, specific for prostate cancer, supplements the predictive power of tPSA to improve diagnosis of disease. Inclusion of this new marker in the standard of care for men at risk for prostate cancer should be considered as it presents marked potential for better prostate biopsy decision making and for improving overall patient care.

Certainty - freedom from doubt; a total security from error.
What if clinicians were able to make diagnostic and treatment decisions in a state of complete certainty? Patients would no longer face the risks of unnecessary invasive techniques, with their own inherent risks, or of adverse events related to avoidable treatment. In diagnosis of prostate cancer (pCA), the urologist would make prostate biopsy decisions based on non-invasive or minimally-invasive indicators indicating the presence of the disease. No patient would undergo biopsy who did not have prostate cancer. No patient would risk the anxiety and co-morbidities of biopsy without good cause. Further, what if those non-invasive or minimally-invasive indicators quantified tumour aggressiveness? The urologist could then determine the urgency of biopsy and treatment in light of patient desires and life expectancy based on other health status indicators.

Unfortunately, today’s urologists and their patients enjoy no such security in diagnosis and management of the most prevalent disease that they manage.

On the other hand, biopsy decisions have not been uninformed. In addition to clinical variables, demographics, and the presence or absence of other risk factors, digital rectal examination (DRE) of the prostate and measurement of serum total prostate-specific antigen (tPSA) have traditionally been used to assist in biopsy decision-making. Use of these techniques in combination has improved the detection and treatment of pCA over the last few decades. But, the improvement has been limited due to intrinsic weaknesses in both methods. DRE is subjective and displays marginal predictive value[1-3], while PSA is subject to various inherent flaws primarily driven by non-specificity for pCA. Thus, poor survival in prostate cancer results from a current lack of specific, highly predictive methods for early detection and for differentiation of aggressive and indolent cancers.

Recently, a non-invasive urinary test for prostate cancer gene 3 (PCA3) has been developed. PCA3 is an emerging gene-based marker that is highly specific for pCA. This review examines the current diagnostic dilemmas, the weaknesses of traditional testing, and the potential of PCA3 to complement existing diagnostic methodologies.

The dilemma
Let us illustrate the current clinical dilemma with an example: a fifty-five year-old Caucasian man sees his urologist for an initial appointment following referral from primary care. He reports a family history of pCA in second-degree relatives, he complains of frequent urination, and his latest annual physical indicated a serum prostate specific antigen (tPSA) concentration of 2.7 ng/ml. The urologist performs a digital rectal examination (DRE), which reveals no suspicious nodule, and subsequently confirms the tPSA value. Should the urologist recommend prostate biopsy at this time? Despite more than two decades of research on PSA, clinical experience, and establishment of institutional procedures, urologists still cannot make this decision with great confidence.

This example is neither unrealistic nor uncommon[4]. While patients present with more obvious risk for prostate cancer, still others present with more apparently benign indications who are subsequently found to harbour pCA (the prostate cancer rate is ~20% in the range of 2.5-4 ng/ml tPSA, inclusive of indolent and clinically relevant cancers[5]. Even taking a more compelling example wherein the hypothetical patient presents with tPSA between 4 and 10 ng/ml, there is still no certainty that prostate cancer will be detected upon biopsy. In fact, up to 60% of men with tPSA in this range will have a negative biopsy.

PSA: contemporary use and inherent flaws
Beginning at approximately age 50[6], men with a life expectancy of at least ten years undergo annual measurement of serum tPSA. If tPSA results are elevated in comparison to previous results but no other symptoms indicate a risk for pCA, DRE or tPSA testing may be repeated at appropriate intervals to observe and confirm any trends. If tPSA continues to increase or subsequent DRE results are suspicious, the clinician may attempt to rule out various benign conditions using imaging techniques, cystoscopy, and determination of percent free PSA (%fPSA). If the results of these analyses indicate a sufficient risk for pCA, biopsy will be recommended. Of course, the definition of “sufficient risk” will depend on the physician, their interpretation of the data, and established institutional procedures.

Characterizing risk based solely on serum tPSA findings presents inherent difficulties. PSA is specific for prostate tissue but not for prostate cancer. Elevated values of serum tPSA are observed in multiple benign conditions involving enlargement of the prostate [7-11] including prostatic hypertrophy (BPH)[7], and acute prostatitis[8]. Conversely, high body mass index (BMI) erroneously lowers tPSA values as a result of hemodilution[12]. Thus, the interpretation of tPSA values is prone to error arising from non-specific sources.
Furthermore, serum tPSA values have been demonstrated to be poor indicators of pCA aggressiveness regardless of the cutpoint chosen[13]. Because PSA does not correlate well with aggressiveness, there is a trend in clinical practice toward overdiagnosis and consequent overtreatment of prostate cancer[14].

In light of these inherent weaknesses of serum tPSA testing, it is clear that complementary indicators are needed to better inform the decisions to biopsy or perform radical treatments. Preferably, these new indicators would be insensitive to the non-specific factors that affect serum tPSA results. Furthermore, emerging indicators would ideally correlate with tumour aggressiveness and provide information independent of and complementary to serum tPSA.

Identification of PCA3 and early studies
PCA3, also referred to as PCA3DD3 or DD3PCA3 in the literature, was first identified in 1999 via differential display analysis in healthy, hyperplastic, and cancerous tissue from patients undergoing radical prostatectomy[15]. PCA3 exhibited a high level of expression in prostate tumours and was apparently absent in benign tissue. Further analyses demonstrated low but quantifiable expression in benign prostate tissue but undetectable levels of expression in normal tissues from all major organs. Additionally, no expression could be detected in tumours from breast, cervix, endometrium, ovary, or testis, and cancer cell lines from bladder, breast, kidney, and ovaries.

Subsequent studies using quantitative research tests for PCA3 demonstrated a median 66-fold upregulation in prostate malignancies and a high sensitivity and specificity for detection of pCA[16]. The PROGENSA™ PCA3 test was developed soon thereafter. The test employs Transcription-Mediated Amplification (TMA™) technology to quantify PCA3 and PSA messenger RNA (mRNA) in urine samples collected following DRE. The DRE is required to release prostate cells into the urine and the quantification of PSA mRNA is required to normalize for the total mRNA present in a sample (PSA mRNA levels in prostate cells released into urine are completely unrelated to PSA protein levels in blood and are essentially unchanged in pCA[17]). Thus, the method measures both PCA3 mRNA and PSA mRNA and the results are represented as a ratio of the two mRNAs referred to as the “PCA3 Score.” Similar to other gene-based tests, the PCA3 Assay is comparable in cost and complexity. Samples must be sent to an accredited laboratory experienced in performing molecular testing and PCA3 Scores are reported back to the urologist.

Sample collection and specimen stability are robust. Informative rates (percentage of urine samples yielding accurately quantifiable mRNAs for assay) have been demonstrated to exceed 99%[18] and the assays demonstrate good reproducibility with intra- and inter-assay coefficients of variation of <13%>

Clinical Application of the PROGENSA™ PCA3 Assay

Utility of PCA3 testing
Determination of a PCA3 Score may be useful in several clinical scenarios. First, the Score may be used to increase confidence in an initial biopsy decision where serum tPSA results are uncertain (2.5-10 ng/ml). Second, PCA3 testing may be used to increase confidence in a re-biopsy decision wherein DRE and serum tPSA results are suspicious and/or family history and other factors indicate increased risk for pCA. Lastly, when biopsy results are positive but tumour aggressiveness is unknown, PCA3 may be useful in comparing risks and benefits of radical prostatectomy versus active surveillance management. Thus, the availability of a PCA3 Score alone or in combination with existing methods may better guide biopsy decision-making than current methods and may also be useful as an indicator of clinical stage and disease significance.

PCA3 clinical performance in comparison to serum tPSA
Comparative research studies have consistently demonstrated better prostate cancer predictive value of PCA3 versus serum tPSA. Marks and colleagues[20] studied 233 men with a prior negative prostate biopsy but with evidence of serum tPSA persistently above 2.5 ng/ml. Applying receiver-operating characteristic (ROC) curve analysis to PCA3 and serum tPSA results obtained after a re-biopsy of these men yielded significantly higher area under the curve (AUC) for PCA3 versus serum tPSA (Table 1).

In a separate study, Groskopf, et al.[21] compared PCA3 and tPSA in 70 men who received prostate biopsy based on pre-existing risk factors in comparison with 52 apparently healthy men with no known risk factors. At a PCA3 Score cutpoint of 50, sensitivity was 69% and specificity was 79%. For serum tPSA at the established cutpoint of 2.5 ng/ml and with sensitivity held constant at 69%, specificity for tPSA was 60%.

The foregoing results have been recently confirmed using a time-resolved fluorescence-based variant of the PCA3 test by van Gils, et al.[22] In their multicenter study of 583 men with serum tPSA between 3 and 15 ng/ml, the AUC for prediction of positive biopsy was higher for PCA3 than for serum tPSA testing (Table 1). Also, a correlation of increasing PCA3 Score with increasing probability of positive repeat biopsy was demonstrated [22].

Associations with prostate volume and tumour volume/tumour aggressiveness
An association of a marker with prostate volume regardless of the presence or absence of prostate cancer is an undesirable characteristic as it indicates non-specificity of the marker. Whereas serum tPSA shows such associations, PCA3 has not in an initial study by Deras, et al.[23] In this study, the associations of both markers with prostate volume were evaluated in a cohort of 570 men scheduled for initial or repeat prostate biopsy. Serum tPSA values increased demonstrably and significantly (p<0.0001) p="0.54)." r="0.27," p="0.008)," p="0.007)">

Most recently, a study by Haese et al.[18] has supported the findings of Nakanishi, Deras and Marks. In this multicenter, multinational European study, 463 men with one or more previous negative biopsies were re-biopsied following DRE and urine collections. The re-biopsy yielded 128 cancers (28%). Detected cancers were classified as indolent if they were stage T1c, had PSA density <0.15 p="0.0059)." p="0.0401)" p="0.005).">

PCA3 performance versus serum total PSA range
It is desirable for any new indicator of pCA to maintain its predictive value across the entire range of population serum tPSA values. To address the performance of PCA3 in this regard, Deras, et al.[23] categorised their study cohort into patients with serum tPSA <4>10 ng/ml and determined sensitivity and specificity of PCA3 for detection of positive biopsy within each category. Across all categories, sensitivity was 54% at a specificity of 74%. These parameters varied <10% p="0.7282)">

Complementarity to serum total PSA
If PSA and PCA3 are destined to be complementary in clinical management and treatment decisions, there must be evidence that the utility of both markers is enhanced when data are analyzed as covarying predictors of biopsy outcomes. In the Deras study[23], urinary PCA3 and serum tPSA were evaluated in univariate and multivariate logistic regression models. Predictive probability relative to biopsy outcome was determined. For tPSA alone, PCA3 alone, and the combination of tPSA + PCA3, the areas under the curve from ROC were 0.547, 0.686, and 0.752, respectively (Figure 1). The increase in AUC observed in the multivariate model was strongly significant (p=0.0002), demonstrating the complementarity of the methods.

Furthermore, the incorporation of PCA3 information into the Prostate Cancer Prevention Trial (PCPT) risk calculator demonstrated additional benefit[25]. Although it was not possible to measure directly urinary PCA3 Scores in the PCPT study population, statistical methods to incorporate data from external populations were developed [25]. PCA3, serum tPSA, and DRE data from a cohort of 521 men undergoing prostate biopsy were included in the original PCPT risk calculator, serum tPSA by itself, urinary PCA3 by itself, and an updated PCPT risk calculator incorporating PCA3. AUC for the PCPT calculator incorporating PCA3 was 0.703, which was statistically superior to the PCPT calculator without PCA3 (AUC=0.618, p<0.025).>

The recent Haese study[18] again supports these earlier findings. In a multivariate logistic regression model for prediction of pCA at repeat biopsy, PCA3 score was an independent predictor (p=0.006) of outcome following adjustment for age, serum tPSA, %fPSA, DRE, and prostate volume. Inclusion of PCA3 in the base model containing the other terms improved accuracy of the model by 4.2%, which was significant at p<0.001.>

Avoidance of unnecessary biopsies
The effectiveness of PSA screening on prostate cancer mortality is still a matter for debate, however an increasing number of men undergo PSA testing annually. For example, data from the National Cancer Institute indicates that an additional 1.8 million U.S. men age 40-69 and 1.2 million men over 70 would have an abnormal PSA value if the threshold for PSA was decreased from 4.0 ng/ml to 2.5 ng/ml [26]. This results in an additional 3.0 million men with an elevated PSA that would be candidates for biopsy. Such trends demonstrate a need for other cancer specific markers to improve diagnostic and treatment decision-making.
The Haese study[18] provides some insights regarding identification of patients for whom biopsy is unwarranted. At a PCA3 Score cut-off of 20, repeat biopsies would have been reduced by 44% while missing only 9% of cancers. This finding suggests the potential of PCA3 to reduce the incidence of overdiagnosis and further studies are ongoing.

Conclusion
Over the past two decades, serum tPSA, together with other indicators, has guided biopsy decisions for urologists. While research during this period has characterized the strengths of tPSA testing, many weaknesses have also been revealed. The discovery and clinical evaluation of PCA3 has demonstrated that the marker supplements tPSA in diagnosis and is insensitive to the non-specific factors that can affect circulating tPSA levels. The addition of PCA3 to the urologist’s diagnostic toolset will not result in a state of certainty; however, diagnostic sensitivity, specificity, and predictive value are incrementally improved by its inclusion. In turn, biopsy and management decisions may be better informed. This has the potential to improve the overall level of patient care.


Tuesday, March 24, 2009

Should Men Be Screened For Prostate Cancer?

Just last week, two major studies on the usefulness of screening men for prostate cancer were released; one was a US study and the other was done in Europe. You can find a good summary article written by Tara Parker-Pope at this link at http://well.blogs.nytimes.com/2009/03/23/for-men-to-screen-or-not-to-screen/#comment-261739.

Sunday, March 15, 2009

Prostate Cancer Survivor Preaches Testing

Convincing men to test for prostate cancer is an ongoing challenge. A recent article in the South Florida Times provides a great example. A 46 year old man recently diagnosed with prostate cancer organized a free seminar attended by 80 men. Of the 80, only 33 took a blood test (41%) and only 27 (34%) agreed to a digital rectal exam. We guys are a macho bunch, but there is a very real danger here. The 10-year survival rate for treatment prior to metastasis is 97%; for post-metatastic treatment the 10-year survival rate is only 17%. If we survivors can gently remind our colleagues about the need for testing and tracking the annual change - if any, we can make some significant inroads into late diagnoses. The Prostate Cancer Awareness Project is sending a rider across the US by bicycle in 2010 to raise funds for awareness events. Visit http://www.TourdeUSA.org and join the team.

Prostate Cancer Screening. Doing More Harm Than Good?

Following is a link to a recent Reader's Digest article on cancer screening. (http://today.msnbc.msn.com/id2942490/) The article summarizes some current thinking that too much screening causes unnecessary treatment of cancers that will never become life threatening. The author cites the views of a Veterans Affairs doctor that takes this view concerning prostate cancer. While I am not a physician, I am a five year prostate cancer survivor who is still here because of an accidental diagnosis of Stage 2 prostate cancer. Since 29,000 men die annually in the US from prostate cancer (that is almost 300,000 men each decade), I find the argument that there is too much screening difficult to accept. What is leads me to believe is that our screening programs and regimes are not sufficiently widespread and effective. I have yet to find any database that shows the following minimal data for each annual cohort of prostate cancer deaths: 1) age at diagnosis; 2) state at diagnosis; 3) method of diagnosis; 4) treatment regime; 5) age at mortality; 6) % experiencing erectile or incontinence issues. Until we have that data, it would seem to be difficult to argue on either side of the screening controversy. As a prostate cancer survivor, though, I think I would argue for a more widespread screening program (only 51% of men currently test). Personally, I would prefer to live an additional 5 - 10 years even if I did so with some degree of incontinence or erectile dysfunction, and I know my wife feels the same. I would love to hear your comments.

Tuesday, March 3, 2009

First Post

This blog will chronicle my journey through life with prostate cancer as my wingman. I was diagnosed with prostate cancer in December 2002, and underwent radical prostatectomy in May 2003. Since then, I have continued my business life and created a small non-profit, the Prostate Cancer Awareness Project, to get men to test annually. The past five years have been interesting ones, and I have decided to create this blog to post my thoughts for those that are following in my footsteps and those of the men who have preceded me. The blog name, 29,000 Men, refers to the approximate number of men that die each year in the United States from prostate cancer. I look forward to engaging with you.