Giri Veda N, Egleston Brian, Ruth Karen, Uzzo Robert G, Chen David Y T, Buyyounouski Mark, Raysor Susan, Hooker Stanley, Torres Jada Benn, Ramike Teniel, Mastalski Kathleen, Kim Taylor Y, Kittles Rick
Division of Population Sciences and Department of Medical Oncology, Fox Chase Cancer Center, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA.
Cancer Prev Res (Phila). 2009 Mar;2(3):244-50. doi: 10.1158/1940-6207.CAPR-08-0150. Epub 2009 Feb 24.
"Race-specific" prostate-specific antigen (PSA) needs evaluation in men at high risk for prostate cancer for optimizing early detection. Baseline PSA and longitudinal prediction for prostate cancer were examined by self-reported race and genetic West African (WA) ancestry in the Prostate Cancer Risk Assessment Program, a prospective high-risk cohort. Eligibility criteria were age 35 to 69 years, family history of prostate cancer, African American race, or BRCA1/2 mutations. Biopsies were done at low PSA values (<4.0 ng/mL). WA ancestry was discerned by genotyping 100 ancestry informative markers. Cox proportional hazards models evaluated baseline PSA, self-reported race, and genetic WA ancestry. Cox models were used for 3-year predictions for prostate cancer. Six hundred forty-six men (63% African American) were analyzed. Individual WA ancestry estimates varied widely among self-reported African American men. Race-specific differences in baseline PSA were not found by self-reported race or genetic WA ancestry. Among men with > or =1 follow-up visit (405 total, 54% African American), 3-year prediction for prostate cancer with a PSA of 1.5 to 4.0 ng/mL was higher in African American men with age in the model (P = 0.025) compared with European American men. Hazard ratios of PSA for prostate cancer were also higher by self-reported race (1.59 for African American versus 1.32 for European American, P = 0.04). There was a trend for increasing prediction for prostate cancer with increasing genetic WA ancestry. "Race-specific" PSA may need to be redefined as higher prediction for prostate cancer at any given PSA in African American men. Large-scale studies are needed to confirm if genetic WA ancestry explains these findings to make progress in personalizing prostate cancer early detection.
“种族特异性”前列腺特异性抗原(PSA)需要在前列腺癌高危男性中进行评估,以优化早期检测。在前列腺癌风险评估项目(一项前瞻性高危队列研究)中,通过自我报告的种族和遗传的西非(WA)血统来检查前列腺癌的基线PSA和纵向预测情况。纳入标准为年龄35至69岁、有前列腺癌家族史、非裔美国人种族或携带BRCA1/2突变。在PSA值较低(<4.0 ng/mL)时进行活检。通过对100个祖先信息标记进行基因分型来识别WA血统。Cox比例风险模型评估基线PSA、自我报告的种族和遗传的WA血统。Cox模型用于前列腺癌的3年预测。对646名男性(63%为非裔美国人)进行了分析。自我报告的非裔美国男性个体的WA血统估计差异很大。自我报告的种族或遗传的WA血统均未发现基线PSA存在种族特异性差异。在有≥1次随访的男性(共405名,54%为非裔美国人)中,模型中年龄在一定范围的非裔美国男性,PSA为1.5至4.0 ng/mL时,前列腺癌的3年预测高于欧洲裔美国男性(P = 0.025)。按自我报告的种族划分,前列腺癌的PSA风险比也更高(非裔美国人为1.59,欧洲裔美国人为1.32,P = 0.04)。随着遗传WA血统增加,前列腺癌的预测有上升趋势。“种族特异性”PSA可能需要重新定义为在任何给定PSA水平下,非裔美国男性患前列腺癌的预测更高。需要大规模研究来确认遗传WA血统是否能解释这些发现,以便在前列腺癌早期检测个性化方面取得进展。