Radiation Oncology/Prostate/PSA

< Radiation Oncology < Prostate


Prostate Specific Antigen (PSA)

For PSA screening, see Screening and Prevention.

History of PSA

Defining "PSA era":


PSA use in early clinical trials:


PSA Measurement

PSA level may be affected by a number of processes:


Impact of Ejaculation


Percent-Free PSA


PSA Failure

PSA Nadir (PSAn) Post Radiotherapy

In postradiotherapy patients PSA may never reach completely undetectable levels and rather will reach a very low nadir, typically below 1.0 ng/mL within 2 years after therapy. (0.2 ng/mL within 5 years in patients treated with simultaneous irradiation with a transperineal prostate iodine implant, followed by external beam irradiation) Of particular interest is the correlation of PSA nadir levels to outcomes among RT patients.

Critz and colleagues found that a PSA nadir < 0.2 ng/mL defines disease freedom following brachytherapy plus EBRT, and that a PSA nadir > 1.0 ng/mL predicts for disease recurrence at a median of 5 years of follow-up. In addition, data from DeWitt and colleagues demonstrate that a PSA nadir > 1.2 predicts worse outcomes in measures of freedom from PSA failure and progression-free survival in patients undergoing EBRT at the same time point.

Definition of PSA Failure Post-Radiation therapy


Comparison of PSA failure definitions

PSA failure after RT + hormonal therapy

These methods account for the expected rise in PSA after coming off hormonal therapy.

Comparisons:

Definition of PSA Failure Post-Radical Prostatectomy

Therapeutic goal of Radical prostatectomy is removal of prostatic and neoplastic tissue, so post-RP PSA level is undetectable, that is under 0.2 ng/ml (evaluated 30-45 days after surgery). Standard practice is to define post-RP biochemical failure as a PSA level exceeding 0.2 ng/mL on at least two successive evaluations or exceeding 0.4 ng/mL on a single evaluation. By contrast, patients who never achieve undetectable levels and/or whose PSA rises very rapidly following surgery likely have metastatic disease.

The use of very low PSA thresholds risks overtreating patients whose PSA level is detectable due to residual benign prostatic tissue. For example, one recent report demonstrated that a single PSA elevation of less than 0.4 ng/mL after radical prostatectomy is associated with subsequent stable, nonprogressing disease in up to 50% of patients.

PSA kinetics

Post-treatment PSA Bounce

After hormonal therapy + RT

Surrogate Endpoints

References

  1. 1 2 Klein, Eric (ed.)(2004). Management of Prostate Cancer. Google books link
  2. PMID 17372918
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