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Performance of prostate‐specific antigen mass in estimation of prostate volume in Japanese men with benign prostate hyperplasia
Author(s) -
Masuda Hitoshi,
Kawakami Satoru,
Sakura Mizuaki,
Fujii Yasuhisa,
Koga Fumitaka,
Saito Kazutaka,
Numao Noboru,
Yonese Junji,
Fukui Iwao,
Kihara Kazunori
Publication year - 2012
Publication title -
international journal of urology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.172
H-Index - 67
eISSN - 1442-2042
pISSN - 0919-8172
DOI - 10.1111/j.1442-2042.2012.03069.x
Subject(s) - prostate , prostate specific antigen , medicine , urology , hyperplasia , prostate cancer , prostate biopsy , body mass index , antigen , pca3 , immunology , cancer
Objectives: Obese men with benign prostate hyperplasia might have lower serum prostate‐specific antigen because of hemodilution, resulting in underestimation of total prostate volume by serum prostate‐specific antigen. The aim of this study was to compare the performance of prostate‐specific antigen mass as the absolute amount of prostate‐specific antigen protein secreted into circulation with that of serum prostate‐specific antigen in the prediction of total prostate volume. Methods: A total of 1517 men with serum prostate‐specific antigen up to 10 ng/mL, including 1425 with biopsy‐proven benign prostate hyperplasia, were enrolled in this study. Height and weight were used to estimate body mass index, body surface area and plasma volume. Prostate‐specific antigen mass was calculated as serum prostate‐specific antigen multiplied by plasma volume. The association between serum prostate‐specific antigen or prostate‐specific antigen mass and transrectal ultrasound‐measured total prostate volume were evaluated by Pearson's correlation coefficient (Υ), linear regression analyses and receiver operating characteristic curves. Results: Serum prostate‐specific antigen had an inverse relationship with plasma volume, decreasing as plasma volume increased, after adjustment of total prostate volume. Larger total prostate volume per serum prostate‐specific antigen was found in men with higher body mass index or plasma volume. Among all participants, the correlation (Υ = 0.456) between prostate‐specific antigen mass and total prostate volume was apparently stronger than that (Υ = 0.442) between serum prostate‐specific antigen and total prostate volume. Prostate‐specific antigen mass outperformed serum prostate‐specific antigen at estimating total prostate volume cut‐off values of 30 and 40 mL. These findings were more significant in men aged ≥60 years. Conclusions: Prostate‐specific antigen mass performs better than serum prostate‐specific antigen in estimating TPV, especially in men aged ≥60 years.