Persistent prostate-specific antigen expression after neoadjuvant androgen depletion: An early predictor of relapse or incomplete androgen suppression - 16/08/11
Abstract |
Objectives |
To analyze post-androgen depletion (AD) primary tumors to identify markers of treatment failure because AD does not reduce the probability of prostate-specific antigen (PSA) failure after prostatectomy.
Methods |
Tumors removed by radical prostatectomy after 3 months of AD from 21 patients were analyzed for gene expression using oligonucleotide arrays. Differences between patients with and without relapse were identified using a conservative significance criteria of a threefold change and delta 0.68, ensuring a false discovery rate of less than 11%.
Results |
At 50 months of follow-up, 7 of the 18 evaluable patients developed a biochemical recurrence. Gleason grade, pretherapy PSA level, T stage, and margin status were similar between the two groups. Patients with recurrence had greater post-AD PSA levels than those without recurrence (0.87 versus 0.19 ng/mL; P = 0.042). Gene expression analysis revealed 35 probe sets overexpressed in tumors from patients who relapsed. Among the highest ranked probe sets were PSA and other androgen-responsive genes. Serum PSA values during AD revealed similar findings. After 40 days of AD, the PSA level in those without recurrence was 1.21 ng/mL versus 4.5 ng/mL in those with recurrence (P = 0.0034). Immunohistochemistry of post-AD tumors also demonstrated a high PSA staining intensity in many tumors that recurred relative to those that didn’t.
Conclusions |
The results of our study show that early recurrence is associated with expression of androgen-responsive genes. Surprisingly, these could be identified as early as 3 months after the initiation of AD therapy. Whether this represents a failure to abrogate androgen receptor mediated signaling with androgen depletion or early reactivation of signaling is under study.
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This study was supported by National Institutes of Health grant U01 CA84999 (W. Gerald), National Institutes of Health grant T32CA09207, National Institutes of Health grant P50 CA92629, SPORE, and National Institutes of Health grant CA 05826, the PepsiCo Foundation, and the Aventis CALGB Clinical Research Award (C. J. Ryan). |
Vol 68 - N° 4
P. 834-839 - octobre 2006 Regresar al númeroBienvenido a EM-consulte, la referencia de los profesionales de la salud.
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