Prostate cancer incidence and disease-specific survival of men with initial prostate-specific antigen less than 3.0 ng/ml who are participating in ERSPC Rotterdam |
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Authors: | Bul Meelan van Leeuwen Pim J Zhu Xiaoye Schröder Fritz H Roobol Monique J |
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Affiliation: | Department of Urology, Erasmus MC, University Medical Centre, Rotterdam, The Netherlands. m.bul@erasmusmc.nl |
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Abstract: | ![]()
BackgroundThe European Randomised Study of Screening for Prostate Cancer (ERSPC) applies a prostate-specific antigen (PSA) cut-off value ≥3.0 ng/ml as an indication for lateralised sextant biopsy.ObjectiveTo analyse the incidence and disease-specific mortality for prostate cancer (PCa) in men with an initial PSA <3.0 ng/ml.Design, setting and participantsFrom November 1993 to December 1999, a total of 42 376 men identified from population registries in the Rotterdam region (55–74 yr of age) were randomised to an intervention or control arm. A total of 19 950 men were screened during the first screening round.InterventionA PSA <3.0 ng/ml was below the biopsy threshold. PCa cases were identified at rescreens every 4 yr or as interval cancers.MeasurementsDistribution of incidence, aggressiveness, and disease-specific mortality of PCa per PSA range was measured. Causes of death were evaluated by an independent committee, and follow-up was complete until 31 December 2008.Results and limitationsFrom 1993 to 2008, 915 PCa cases were diagnosed in 15 758 men (5.8%) with an initial PSA <3.0 ng/ml and a median age of 62.3 yr. Median overall follow-up was 11 yr. PCa incidence increased significantly with higher initial PSA levels. Aggressive PCa (clinical stage ≥T2c, Gleason score ≥8, PSA >20 ng/ml, positive lymph nodes, or metastases at diagnosis) was detected in 66 of 733 screen-detected PCa cases (9.0%) and 72 of 182 interval-detected PCa cases (39.6%). Twenty-three PCa deaths occurred in the total population (0.15%), with an increasing risk of PCa mortality in men with higher initial PSA values.ConclusionsThe risk of PCa, aggressive PCa and PCa mortality in a screening population with initial PSA <3.0 ng/ml increases significantly with higher initial PSA levels. These results contribute to the risk stratification and individual management of men in PSA-based screening programmes. |
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Keywords: | Prostatic neoplasms Early detection of cancer Prostate-specific antigen Incidence Survival |
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