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PSA in 2010 James L. Mohler, MD Chair, NCCN Prostate Cancer Panel Department of Urology Prostate Cancer Research Program Roswell Park Cancer Institute, Buffalo, NY Every 3 Minutes an American is Diagnosed with Prostate Cancer Every 18 Minutes an American Dies of Prostate Cancer The Prostate Cancer Challenge • Complex disease • Many controversial aspects of management • Lack of sound data to support most recommendations • Several variables must be considered to tailor prostate cancer therapy to an individual patient • Guidelines provide a framework on which to base treatment decisions Prostate Cancer: #1 Incidence (192,280) #2 Deaths (27,360) Cancer Statistics, 2009 U.S. Annual AgeAdjusted Incidence Rates 1975 – 2005 Cancer Statistics, 2009 U.S. Annual Age-Adjusted Mortality Rates, 1930 – 2005 Cancer Statistics, 2009 CaP Screening Recommendations • American Urological Association – Annual PSA & DRE - From age 50 until LE <10 yrs - From age 40 if high risk (AA or family history) • American Cancer Society (3/3/2010) - Annual PSA ± DRE - From age 50 until LE <10 yrs - From age 45 if high risk (AA or family history) - From age 40 if multiple family members CaP Screening Recommendations • American College of Physicians; American Academy of Family Physicians – Counsel men 50 to 65 regarding risk vs. benefit • U.S. Preventive Services Task Force – Routine screening not advocated especially >75 • NCCN (the best recommendation) – PSA and DRE at 40, if <1, at 45 – PSA and DRE at 45, if <1, at 50 – If high risk because African American, family history or PSA >1, annual PSA and DRE – Routine screening less frequent in older men (65-75) and not advocated especially >75 How reliable is PSA ? • 70% of men with elevated PSA have negative biopsies • PSA can fluctuate by 36% day to day • Rate of rise more accurate – PSA Velocity or PSA Doubling Time – Requires ≥ 3 PSAs over ≥ 18 mo • PSAV ≥ 0.75 ng/ml or PSADT ≤ 3 yrs How Reliable is Prostate Biopsy? • Biopsies sample prostate • Biopsy detection rate – – – – First: 75% of existing cancers Second: 91% Third: 97% Fourth: 99% • Accuracy of Gleason grade compared to RP – 30% grade increases – 5% grade decreases PSA and Prostate Cancer Screening • PSA increases the detection of organ confined CaP • Serial PSA screening improves the ability to detect organ confined prostate cancer • PSA detects 2x as many cancers as DRE Screening Performance Mammography PSA + Predictive Value 7-17% 33% Organ Confined 50% 80% + Lymph Nodes 20% 2% “Latent” Cancer 8% 7% Screening Men with a Family History • 2-3 fold increased risk if first-degree relative with CaP (Keetch, J Urol, 1995; Walsh, Cancer, 1997) • Younger age at presentation • Comparable results with RP (Beva, J Urol, 1998) • Begin screening at age 40 Prostate Cancer Incidence and Death Rates by Race and Ethnicity, 2001 - 2005 Cancer Statistics, 2009 Caucasian American African American Asian American and Pacific Islander American Indian and Alaska Native Hispanic Latino Incidence 156.7 248.5 93.8 73.3 138 Mortality 24.6 59.4 11.0 21.1 20.6 Use of PSA for Early Detection is Most Appropriate for: A) African Americans B) C) D) E) Men with CaP in father or brother Men with life expectancy ≥ 10 yrs Men with BRAC1 mutation All of the above March 26, 2009 CaP Explosion NEJM 360:1310-19 and 1320-28 ERSPC (European) Trial • 182,000 men ages 50-74 • Statistics on 162,387 men ages 55-69 • Mean number of PSA tests 2.1 • Median f/u 9 yrs PSA cutoff Design Biopsy Interval Finland 4.0 Pop-based 10-12 4 Italy 4.0 Pop-based 6 (transperineal) 4 Netherlands 4.0 Efficacy 6 4 Belgium 4.0 (originally 10) Efficacy 6 4-7 Switzerland 3.0 Efficacy 6 4 Spain 3.0 Efficacy 6 4 Sweden 3.0 Pop-based 6 2 European Trial Screening Control Incidence 8.2% 4.8% Prostate cancer deaths 214 327 Rate ratio for prostate cancer death 0.80 (p=0.04) To prevent one death from prostate cancer: • 1410 men need screened • 48 additional cases of prostate cancer need treated European Trial PLCO (American) Trial • 76,693 men ages 55-74 at 10 centers • Annual PSA screening for 6 yrs vs. usual care • Median f/u 11.5 years American Trial Screening Control PSA testing 86% 40% Incidence 7.5% 6.1% No. of advanced cases 122 135 7 years 50 44 10 years (f/u for 67% of subjects) 92 82 312 225 Prostate cancer deaths Non-prostate cancer deaths (10 yrs) Possible Reasons for a Negative Trial • PSA cutoff 4 ng/ml too high • Control arm contaminated - 38% contamination anticipated - PSA within past year - 86% in screened group - 40% in control group Possible Reasons for a Negative Trial • Widespread PSA testing removed prostate cancer patients from consideration for enrollment • Improved treatments for prostate cancer applied to both arms blunted effects of screening • Follow-up too short PSA Screening? “ …our results support the validity of the recent recommendations of the U.S. Preventive Services TaskForce, especially against screening all men over the age of 75 years.” NEJM: Authors of PLCO trial “The real impact and tragedy of prostate cancer screening is the doubling of the lifetime risk of a diagnosis of prostate cancer with little if any decrease in the risk of dying from this disease,” Otis Brawley, Chief Medical Officer, American Cancer Society What does all this mean? • PSA was doomed to failure (screened older men and didn’t include many African Americans or men with family history of CaP) • Over-treatment may blunt benefits of treatment • Even with longer followup, the American study is unlikely to be positive. Even if it is, the impact of screening will be so small that it may not be clinically significant. • Annual screening may be too frequent • In the European study, screening was every 4 yrs • In the American study, the majority of subjects in the control arm were screened and the control arm looks rather similar to the q 4 yrs screening arm of the European study What does all this mean? • PSA was doomed to failure (screened older men and didn’t include many African Americans or men with family history of CaP) • Over-treatment may blunt benefits of treatment • Even with longer followup, the American study is unlikely to be positive. Even if it is, the impact of screening will be so small that it may not be clinically significant. • Annual screening may be too frequent • In the European study, screening was every 4 yrs • In the American study, the majority of subjects in the control arm were screened and the control arm looks rather similar to the q 4 yrs screening arm of the European study 2010 Guideline Updates 1. Defined new risk category: very low risk CaP 2. Active surveillance only recommendation for men with a. low risk CaP and L Exp < 10 yrs b. very low risk CaP and L Exp < 20 yrs 3. Active surveillance program defined Preoperative Criteria associated with Clinically Insignificant Disease in the Radical Prostatectomy Specimen • • • • • Gleason Sum <7 PSA <10 No. positive biopsy cores <3 CaP <50% in any biopsy PSAD <0.15 Epstein, JAMA, 1994 2010 NCCN Concerns • Approximately 3% of all men will die of prostate cancer (2007) • Second leading cause of cancer mortality • Mortality from prostate cancer has declined by 31% over past 13 yrs - Screening? - Treatment? • Any active treatment will significantly decrease quality of life 2010 Guideline Updates 1. Very low risk CaP Low Risk - T1-T2a - GS 2-6 - PSA<10 Very Low Risk - T1c - GS 2-6 - PSA<10 - <3 cores positive - <50% CaP in any core - PSAD<0.15 • Incorporates the strictest Epstein criteria from all definitions for clinically insignificant CaP (Epstein, JAMA, 1994) • New nomogram may be better (Chun, Cancer, 2008) 2010 Guideline Updates 2. Active surveillance only recommendation for men with a. Low risk CaP and L Exp < 10 yrs b. Very low risk CaP and L Exp < 20 yrs Concern: “problems of over-treatment related to the increased diagnosis of early CaP from PSA testing” 2010 Guideline Updates 3. Active surveillance program a. PSA as often as every 6 mo b. DRE as often as every 12 mo c. Prostate biopsy as often as every 12 mo when L Exp > 10 yrs d. Uncertain what the progression criteria should be to warrant treatment