European Urology

European Urology

Volume 54, issue 5, pages 971-1208, November 2008

Prostate Cancer

Clinical Utility of the PCA3 Urine Assay in European Men Scheduled for Repeat Biopsy eulogo1

Alexander Haese, Alexandre de la Taille, Hendrik van Poppel, Michael Marberger, Arnulf Stenzl, Peter F.A. Mulders, Hartwig Huland, Clément-Claude Abbou, Mesut Remzi, Martina Tinzl, Susan Feyerabend, Alexander B. Stillebroer, Martijn P.M.Q. van Gils, Jack A. Schalken.

Accepted 16 June 2008, pages 1081 - 1088

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Abstract

Background

The Prostate CAncer gene 3 (PCA3) assay has shown promise as an aid in prostate cancer (pCA) diagnosis in identifying men with a high probability of a positive (repeat) biopsy.

Objective

This study evaluated the clinical utility of the PROGENSA PCA3 assay.

Design, setting, and participants

This European prospective, multicentre study enrolled men with one or two negative biopsies scheduled for repeat biopsy.

Measurements

After digital rectal examination (DRE), first-catch urine was collected to measure PCA3 mRNA concentration and to calculate the PCA3 score. The PCA3 score was compared to biopsy outcome. The diagnostic accuracy of the PCA3 assay was compared to percent of free prostate-specific antigen (%fPSA).

Results and limitations

In 463 men, the positive repeat biopsy rate was 28%. The higher the PCA3 score, the greater the probability of a positive repeat biopsy. The PCA3 score (cut-off of 35) had a greater diagnostic accuracy than %fPSA (cut-off of 25%). The PCA3 score was independent of the number of previous biopsies, age, prostate volume, and total prostate-specific antigen (PSA) level. Moreover, the PCA3 score was significantly higher in men with high-grade prostate intraepithelial neoplasia (HGPIN) versus those without HGPIN, clinical stage T2 versus T1, Gleason score ≥7 versus <7, and “significant” versus “indolent” (clinical stage T1c, PSA density [PSAD] <0.15 ng/ml, Gleason score in biopsy ≤6, and percent positive cores ≤33%) pCA.

Conclusions

The probability of a positive repeat biopsy increases with rising PCA3 scores. The PCA3 score was superior to %fPSA for predicting repeat prostate biopsy outcome and may be indicative of clinical stage and significance of pCa.

Take Home Message

This study in men with 1–2 negative prostate biopsies demonstrates the clinical utility of the Prostate CAncer gene 3 (PCA3) assay in guiding decisions about which patients require repeat biopsy. The PCA3 score may also be indicative of the clinical stage and aggressiveness of prostate cancer.

Keywords: Diagnostic methods, PCA3, Prostate biopsy, Prostate cancer, Prostate specific antigen, Sensitivity, Specificity.