European Urology

European Urology

Volume 56, issue 5, pages 753-890, November 2009

Prostate Cancer

Prostate-Specific Antigen Velocity for Early Detection of Prostate Cancer: Result from a Large, Representative, Population-based Cohort eulogo1

Andrew J. Vickers, Tineke Wolters, Caroline J. Savage, Angel M. Cronin, M. Frank O’Brien, Kim Pettersson, Monique J. Roobol, Gunnar Aus, Peter T. Scardino, Jonas Hugosson, Fritz H. Schröder, Hans Lilja.

Accepted 30 July 2009, Published online 7 August 2009, pages 753 - 760


Abstract

Background

It has been suggested that changes in prostate-specific antigen (PSA) over time (ie, PSA velocity [PSAV]) aid prostate cancer detection. Some guidelines do incorporate PSAV cut points as an indication for biopsy.

Objective

To evaluate whether PSAV enhances prediction of biopsy outcome in a large, representative, population-based cohort.

Design, setting, and participants

There were 2742 screening-arm participants with PSA <3 ng/ml at initial screening in the European Randomized Study of Screening for Prostate Cancer in Rotterdam, Netherlands, or Göteborg, Sweden, and who were subsequently biopsied during rounds 2–6 due to elevated PSA.

Measurements

Total, free, and intact PSA and human kallikrein 2 were measured for 1–6 screening rounds at intervals of 2 or 4 yr. We created logistic regression models to predict prostate cancer based on age and PSA, with or without free-to-total PSA ratio (%fPSA). PSAV was added to each model and any enhancement in predictive accuracy assessed by area under the curve (AUC).

Results and limitations

PSAV led to small enhancements in predictive accuracy (AUC of 0.569 vs 0.531; 0.626 vs 0.609 if %fPSA was included), although not for high-grade disease. The enhancement depended on modeling a nonlinear relationship between PSAV and cancer. There was no benefit if we excluded men with higher velocities, which were associated with lower risk. These results apply to men in a screening program with elevated PSA; men with prior negative biopsy were not evaluated in this study.

Conclusions

In men with PSA of about ≥3 ng/ml, we found little justification for formal calculation of PSAV or for use of PSAV cut points to determine biopsy. Informal assessment of PSAV will likely aid clinical judgment, such as a sudden rise in PSA suggesting prostatitis, which could be further evaluated before biopsy.

Take Home Message

Although there is a statistical association between prostate-specific antigen (PSA) velocity and prostate cancer, PSA velocity does not help detect prostate cancer once PSA and age are taken into consideration.

Keywords: Cancer detection, Predictive models, Prostate biopsy, Prostate cancer, Prostate-specific antigen, PSA velocity.


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