Asbell S O, Vijayakumar S
Department of Radiation Oncology, Albert Einstein Medical Center, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA.
Prostate. 1997 Apr 1;31(1):42-6. doi: 10.1002/(sici)1097-0045(19970401)31:1<42::aid-pros7>3.0.co;2-k.
Prostate-specific antigen (PSA) is a good objective measure of tumor cell burden or virulence of disease, or both, in prostate cancer. Many differences between whites and African Americans (AA) have been noted in prostate cancer in the United States, including a poorer outcome in African Americans. To study whether AAs present with more tumor cell burden or more virulent disease, or both, at presentation, serum PSA levels between whites and African Americans are compared.
Ninety-two patients were seen during April 1988-August 1993 at Albert Einstein Medical Center, Philadelphia; these patients were identified from computer registration records in 1994. Fifty-five patients were AAs and 37 were whites: 14, 55, 15, and 8 had stage A, B, C, or D1 disease, respectively, and 29, 45, and 17 had grade 1, 2, or 3 tumors. Because of positive skewing of actual PSA values, logarithmic transformation was used in statistical analysis. Two sample t-tests and analysis of variance (ANOVA) were used as appropriate.
In univariate analysis, stage (P = 0.043), grade (P = 0.003), and race (P = 0.029) were correlated with the PSA levels; higher-stage and -grade patients and those of African American ethnicity had higher mean PSA levels; type of biopsy and age did not influence PSA levels. On multivariate analysis, race retained its statistical significance (P = 0.05), whereas other factors lost their significance. White patients had 0.51 times lower PSA levels than those of African Americans with comparable stage and grade tumors. Using ANOVA, an average white patient with stage B, grade 1 tumor is likely to have a PSA value of 7.92 ng/ml, compared to 13.9 ng/ml in an African American of similar stage and grade tumor.
The findings of the study confirm previously reported, similar findings in the greater Chicago area. The causes of such racial differences are unknown and require study with individual-level socioeconomic status adjustments, although preliminary studies suggest sociological causes. An ongoing Radiation Therapy Oncology Group (RTOG) study will determine whether such differences exist at the national level and will adjust for individual levels of socioeconomic status.
前列腺特异性抗原(PSA)是前列腺癌中肿瘤细胞负荷或疾病毒力,或两者的良好客观指标。在美国,前列腺癌患者中白人和非裔美国人(AA)之间存在许多差异,包括非裔美国人的预后较差。为了研究非裔美国人在就诊时是否存在更多的肿瘤细胞负荷或更具侵袭性的疾病,或两者兼而有之,对白人和非裔美国人的血清PSA水平进行了比较。
1988年4月至1993年8月期间,在费城阿尔伯特·爱因斯坦医疗中心共诊治了92例患者;这些患者是1994年从计算机登记记录中识别出来的。其中55例为非裔美国人,37例为白人:分别有14例、55例、15例和8例患有A、B、C或D1期疾病,29例、45例和17例患有1级、2级或3级肿瘤。由于实际PSA值呈正偏态分布,因此在统计分析中采用对数转换。根据情况使用两样本t检验和方差分析(ANOVA)。
在单因素分析中,分期(P = 0.043)、分级(P = 0.003)和种族(P = 0.029)与PSA水平相关;分期和分级较高的患者以及非裔美国人的平均PSA水平较高;活检类型和年龄不影响PSA水平。在多因素分析中,种族仍具有统计学意义(P = 0.05),而其他因素失去了统计学意义。在肿瘤分期和分级相当的情况下,白人患者的PSA水平比非裔美国人低0.51倍。使用方差分析,一名患有B期1级肿瘤的白人患者的PSA值可能为7.92 ng/ml,而一名肿瘤分期和分级相似的非裔美国人的PSA值为13.9 ng/ml。
该研究结果证实了先前在大芝加哥地区报道的类似发现。这种种族差异的原因尚不清楚,需要在调整个体社会经济地位的情况下进行研究,尽管初步研究表明是社会学原因。正在进行的放射治疗肿瘤学组(RTOG)研究将确定这种差异在全国范围内是否存在,并将调整个体的社会经济地位水平。