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Clinical Trial
. 1997 Apr;157(4):1322-8.

Sensitive prostate specific antigen measurements identify men with long disease-free intervals and differentiate aggressive from indolent cancer recurrences within 2 years after radical prostatectomy

Affiliations
  • PMID: 9120931
Clinical Trial

Sensitive prostate specific antigen measurements identify men with long disease-free intervals and differentiate aggressive from indolent cancer recurrences within 2 years after radical prostatectomy

L R Witherspoon et al. J Urol. 1997 Apr.

Abstract

Purpose: Commonly available prostate specific antigen (PSA) assays have detection limits of greater than 0.05 ng/ml., limiting their ability to identify residual or recurrent prostate cancer after radical prostatectomy or to provide prognostic information within the first several years after surgery. We investigated the ability of a sensitive PSA assay to identify residual prostate cancer and men at risk for early recurrence after radical prostatectomy.

Materials and methods: We measured PSA in 1,037 serum samples obtained serially from 127 men after radical prostatectomy using the IMMULITE third generation PSA assay.

Results: The IMMULITE PSA assay has an analytical sensitivity of less than 0.002 ng./ml. and a clinically useful decision threshold of 0.01 ng./ml. With this assay our patients were classified into 3 groups: 1) 50 with a postoperative baseline PSA of less than 0.01 ng./ml. that did not change during an average of 36 months postoperatively, 2) 66 with increasing PSA that exceeded 0.01 ng./ml. in all cases by 30 months postoperatively (20 with clinical cancer recurrences) and 3) 11 with slowly increasing PSA of greater than 0.01 but less than 0.02 ng./ml. at an average of 36 months postoperatively.

Conclusions: The IMMULITE PSA assay provides clinically useful information not previously available from PSA assays with conventional sensitivity, which is highly predictive of cancer activity in patients within 2 years after radical prostatectomy.

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Comment in

  • Predictors of prostate cancer.
    McDougal WS. McDougal WS. J Urol. 1997 Apr;157(4):1335-6. doi: 10.1016/s0022-5347(01)64964-4. J Urol. 1997. PMID: 9120933 No abstract available.

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