Vitiello Gerardo A, Sayed Blayne A, Wardenburg Marla, Perez Sebastian D, Keith Christopher G, Canter Daniel J, Ogan Kenneth, Pearson Thomas C, Turgeon Nicole
Department of Transplant Surgery and Department of Surgery, NYU Langone Medical Center, New York, New York;
Department of Transplant Surgery and.
J Am Soc Nephrol. 2016 Jul;27(7):2157-63. doi: 10.1681/ASN.2014121182. Epub 2015 Dec 23.
Screening recommendations for prostate cancer remain controversial, and no specific guidelines exist for screening in renal transplant candidates. To examine whether the use of prostate-specific antigen (PSA)-based screening in patients with ESRD affects time to transplantation and transplant outcomes, we retrospectively analyzed 3782 male patients ≥18 years of age undergoing primary renal transplant evaluation during a 10-year period. Patients were grouped by age per American Urological Association screening guidelines: group 1, patients <55 years; group 2, patients 55-69 years; and group 3, patients >69 years. A positive screening test result was defined as a PSA level >4 ng/ml. We used univariate analysis and Cox proportional hazards models to identify the independent effect of screening on transplant waiting times, patient survival, and graft survival. Screening was performed in 63.6% of candidates, and 1198 candidates (31.7%) received kidney transplants. PSA screening was not associated with improved patient survival after transplantation (P=0.24). However, it did increase the time to listing and transplantation for candidates in groups 1 and 2 who had a positive screening result (P<0.05). Furthermore, compared with candidates who were not screened, PSA-screened candidates had a reduced likelihood of receiving a transplant regardless of the screening outcome (P<0.001). These data strongly suggest that PSA screening for prostate cancer may be more harmful than protective in renal transplant candidates because it does not appear to confer a survival benefit to these candidates and may delay listing and decrease transplantation rates.
前列腺癌的筛查建议仍存在争议,对于肾移植候选者,目前尚无具体的筛查指南。为了研究在终末期肾病(ESRD)患者中使用基于前列腺特异性抗原(PSA)的筛查是否会影响移植时间和移植结果,我们回顾性分析了在10年期间接受初次肾移植评估的3782名年龄≥18岁的男性患者。根据美国泌尿外科学会的筛查指南,患者按年龄分组:第1组,年龄<55岁的患者;第2组,年龄在55 - 69岁之间的患者;第3组,年龄>69岁的患者。筛查试验阳性结果定义为PSA水平>4 ng/ml。我们使用单因素分析和Cox比例风险模型来确定筛查对移植等待时间、患者生存率和移植物生存率的独立影响。63.6%的候选者进行了筛查,1198名候选者(31.7%)接受了肾移植。PSA筛查与移植后患者生存率的改善无关(P = 0.24)。然而,它确实增加了第1组和第2组筛查结果为阳性的候选者的等待列表时间和移植时间(P < 0.05)。此外,与未进行筛查的候选者相比,无论筛查结果如何,接受PSA筛查的候选者接受移植的可能性降低(P < 0.001)。这些数据强烈表明,对肾移植候选者进行PSA筛查前列腺癌可能弊大于利,因为它似乎并未给这些候选者带来生存益处,反而可能延迟列入等待名单并降低移植率。