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Review |
Department of Urology [C. S., K. J., M. L., D. S., S. A. L.] and Institute of Laboratory Medicine and Pathological Biochemistry [P. S.], University Hospital Charité, Humboldt University Berlin, D-10098 Berlin, Germany
| Abstract |
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1-antichymotrypsin (ACT-PSA), and complexed PSA
is given together with our results. The ratio of fPSA:tPSA has been
shown to improve the specificity of prostate cancer diagnosis on the
basis of tPSA measurements. Unnecessary biopsies can be reduced by
about 1964% in the total PSA range of 410 µg/liter while
only missing 510% of cancers. Furthermore, carcinomas in patients
with PSA values <4 µg/liter can be detected, indicating an improved
sensitivity because of the percent fPSA at low PSA values.
ACT-PSA or complexed PSA alone and the calculated derivatives
are not superior in their discriminatory power compared with the
percent fPSA. The diagnostic significance of the other molecular PSA
forms and human kallikrein 2 needs to be evaluated in more extensive
clinical trials. | Introduction |
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Since its discovery more than 20 years ago, PSA has been established as the most valuable tool for early detection, staging, and monitoring of PCa (2) . In the early 1990s, at least five large series of studies clearly showed that for the detection of PCa, PSA determination alone is better than DRE or other parameters, and that the combination of PSA and DRE is the most effective way to detect PCa (3, 4, 5, 6, 7) .
A large multicenter PCa screening trial of 6630 men showed that the
positive predictive value of PSA increased from
10% in men with PSA
concentrations <4 µg/liter to >80% when the concentrations were
>20 µg/liter (5)
. Most patients with a PSA value <10
µg/liter were diagnosed with early stage disease, whereas
50% of
patients with PSA concentrations >10 µg/liter had advanced disease.
These data demonstrated the need for a low PSA cut-point for detecting
PCa in early, curable stages. The generally accepted PSA cutoff of 4
µg/liter leads to a rather high number of 65% false-positive
findings, demonstrating the inability of PSA to discriminate PCa from
other benign diseases (8)
. This is because PSA is mostly
organ- but not cancer-specific. Elevated PSA concentrations are also
observed in BPH, PIN, prostatic ischemia or infarction, acute and
chronic prostatitis, and after clinical manipulations (reviewed in Ref.
9
). Regarding the PSA in serum,
20% of all PCa
patients have a serum PSA concentration <4 µg/liter at the time of
diagnosis, representing the false-negative rate (3
, 10)
.
In addition, PSA also exists in various nonprostatic sources such as
milk or nipple aspirate fluid from the female breast, or in
periurethral, anal, and apocrine sweat glands (11, 12, 13)
.
Various methods were proposed for improving the sensitivity and specificity, especially in the range of 410 µg/liter PSA, to detect PCa. Several concepts such as PSA density, PSA transition zone density, PSA velocity, and age- or race-specific reference ranges have been developed to reduce the false-negative and false-positive rates (reviewed in Refs. 14, 15, 16, 17 ). These calculations based on total PSA could not always fulfill the expectations to reduce the number of unnecessary prostate biopsies (15 , 18) .
Moreover, it has been shown that PSA in serum exists in different molecular forms, and that the measurement of these forms offers new possibilities to improve the diagnostic discrimination between PCa and BPH. The objective of this paper is to review all molecular forms of PSA in serum and tissue and the current views of their clinical utility. Additionally, another member of the serine protease family, the human glandular kallikrein 2, will be discussed separately as a possible new marker for early stage PCa.
| Molecular Forms of PSA |
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1-antitrypsin), ITI, pregnancy zone protein
(an A2M-analogue), or PCI, whereby the PSA-PCI complex could only
be detected in seminal plasma and not in serum (21, 22, 23, 24, 25)
.
Another fraction of the PSA is bound to the 25-fold-larger A2M
molecule. Because of its large size, the A2M completely encapsulates
the smaller PSA molecule, and no free epitope sites of PSA remain for
its detection (26)
. The PSA-A2M can only be measured after
the complex has been opened (27)
. A serum PSA-A2M range of
063% of tPSA has been discussed (27)
. Table 1
gives a synopsis of all molecular forms of PSA described to date in
serum, seminal plasma, and prostatic tissue.
|
| Biological Explanation for the Different Occurrences of Serum PSA Forms in Patients with PCa and BPH |
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(a) A higher ACT expression rate was found in PCa tissue, which could facilitate the complex formation between PSA and ACT at the cellular level (35) . It was postulated that this increased intracellular complex formation would be responsible for the higher serum concentrations of ACT-PSA in PCa patients. Identical DNA sequence data of prostatic ACT in comparison with the hepatic ACT further corroborates the prostatic synthesis of ACT (36) . Although another recent immunohistochemical study confirmed the presence of higher concentrations of ACT in PCa tissue than in BPH tissue (37) , Igawa et al. (38) found a significantly higher ACT proportion in benign tissue. Huber et al. (39) could not demonstrate a substantial amount of intracellular ACT-PSA complexes. It was hypothesized that the concentration of ACT in the prostate epithelium is not sufficient to bind the perhaps excess concentrations of PSA (40) .
Recently, Jung et al. (41) analyzed the intracellular pattern of PSA forms by measuring fPSA, ACT-PSA, cPSA (Bayer Immuno 1 assay), and tPSA in prostatic tissue. The samples were obtained from cancerous and noncancerous parts of the same prostate, from adenomectomy specimens, and from transurethral resection material. fPSA was the main fraction in all tissue samples, whereas the complexed forms were <2% of tPSA. Two other research groups also found fPSA as the vast majority of intracellular PSA in quantitative measurements (42 , 43) . The amounts of fPSA and cPSA forms in benign and malignant prostatic tissue obviously do not explain the behavior of the fPSA:tPSA ratio in serum of PCa and BPH patients.
(b) Differential release of enzymatically active and inactive PSA from normal, BPH prostatic tissue and from prostatic cancerous tissue is another possible explanation for the higher serum concentration of serum ACT-PSA in PCa patients (44 , 45) . Because of the damaged basement membrane in prostate epithelial cells, PSA from PCa tissue can reach the circulation directly. In contrast, the PSA from normal or BPH tissue reaches the circulation much more slowly by leaking "backwards" into the extracellular space where it is susceptible to proteolytic degradation (45) . Chen et al. (44) predicted a protease in BPH nodules that is probably responsible for the inactivation, or "nicking," of PSA in BPH tissue. The inactive, or "nicked," fPSA was isolated in BPH nodule fluids and in serum (44 , 46) . Such nicked PSA reacts with ACT in vitro poorly or not at all (47) . A higher degree of nicked PSA in BPH may partially explain the smaller capability to form complexes with ACT.
(c) Recently proPSA forms in the serum and tissue of PCa patients were isolated (48 , 49) . proPSA was elevated in the peripheral-zone cancer but largely undetectable in the transition zone of matched sets, suggesting a closer correlation with PCa than with BPH (49) . Whether the different distribution of proPSA in tissue of PCa and BPH is attributable to the different activation of proPSA to PSA or not remains to be elucidated.
Recently, the same research group identified a BPH-nodule-associated form of fPSA called bPSA in BPH tissue (42) . The median percent bPSA of tPSA (fPSA was >99% of tissue tPSA) was 11.4% in the transition zone of specimens with nodular BPH. In cancer tissue and in tissue without nodular BPH, the median percent bPSA values ranged significantly lower, from 3.2 to 4.9% (42) . It may be possible that fPSA in the serum of BPH patients contains a higher proportion of bPSA and results in a higher proportion of fPSA in patients with BPH. Measurements of the cancer-associated proPSA together with the nodular BPH-associated bPSA may enhance further the ability to distinguish PCa from BPH (49) .
(d) An irregular glycosylation process of PSA in dysplastic PCa cells was suggested to be the cause for a shift of the isoelectric points of PSA observed in the serum of PCa patients (50) . The higher proportion of fPSA forms with more basic pH in the serum of patients with PCa was discussed as a potential tool for a better distinction between PCa and BPH (50) . Recently, this assumption gained new attention when PSA from a metastatic cell line showed glycosylation rates other than normal PSA (51) .
Altogether, the molecular heterogeneity of fPSA concerning proforms (48 , 49) , nicked forms (44 , 46) , isoelectric point differences (50) , various enzymatic activities (47) , and different amounts of fPSA fragments (52) forecast more research studies on measurements and clinical evaluations of these molecular forms of fPSA (53) . Modern methods of proteomics, including the techniques of two-dimensional electrophoresis (for protein separation) and peptide mass fingerprinting (for protein identification), may provide information of great value for functional assignments of fPSA.
| Clinical Validity of fPSA and fPSA% |
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fPSA% as Discriminator between PCa and BPH in the "Gray Zone"
of 410 µg/liter.
The probability of PCa increases as fPSA% values decrease
(16)
. In the gray zone of 410 µg/liters, fPSA% is
used to improve the specificity, whereas for tPSA values <4
µg/liter, fPSA% may be useful to increase the sensitivity of PCa
detection. Because most urologists recommend prostate biopsy in men
with tPSA serum concentration of >4 µg/liter, the fPSA% parameter
is applied widely to decrease the number of biopsies with true-negative
histological results and thus avoid unnecessary biopsies.
Numerous retrospective studies demonstrated that
1964% of
unnecessary, negative biopsies could be eliminated (19
, 28 , 31
, 32
, 54
, 55)
. Reasons for these substantial differences could be
the use of a wide range of fPSA% cutoffs (1428%) with different
sensitivities from 7895% and the different views of the urologists
on when a biopsy would be necessary. A prospective, multicenter trial
using a cutoff of <25% fPSA showed that unnecessary biopsies could be
reduced by 20% while missing only 5% of PCa in the tPSA range 410
µg/liter (29)
. For the same tPSA range, using a cutoff
of 20% fPSA, 29% of biopsies could be avoided (31)
.
Another study using a 24%-fPSA cutoff attained comparable results
(56)
.
In our retrospective investigation on 233 PCa and BPH patients, we used
a 22.5% fPSA cutoff at the 90%-sensitivity level (57)
.
Compared with tPSA alone, the specificity increased from 18% to
55% for tPSA values between 2 and 10 µg/liter. Using this cutoff,
unnecessary biopsies could have been avoided in
65% of BPH patients
while only missing 8% of cancers (57)
.
fPSA% as an Early Indicator of PCa in the tPSA Zone <4
µg/liter.
About 20% of men with serum tPSA levels between 2.6 and 4 µg/liter
will have a clinically detectable PCa within a 3- to 5-year period
(58
, 59) . On the basis of current results of the European
Randomized Study of Screening for Prostate Cancer on 8621 men,
Schröder et al. (60)
calculated that
nearly 50% of all detectable cancers can be diagnosed with PSA 04
µg/liter. Of 50 prostatectomy cases with PSA <4 µg/liter, 84% had
a stage pT2 or less, but 48% had a Gleason score
of
7. According to the current understanding, these cancers must be
considered aggressive but still organ-confined (60)
. In
addition to the fact that 3050% of men with tPSA concentrations
between 4 and 10 µg/liter already have extraprostatic disease at the
time of surgery (5
, 61) , it is of utmost importance to
identify these early nonpalpable cancers in a still-curable state.
For serum tPSA concentrations of 2.54 µg/liter, Djavan et
al. (62)
compared PSA, PSA density, PSA transition
zone density, PSA velocity, and fPSA% for early detection of PCa in a
prospective evaluated population of 273 men. fPSA% was revealed to be
superior to all other PSA indexes. At the 95%-sensitivity point,
29.3% of unnecessary biopsies could have been avoided
(62)
. Vashi et al. (56)
used a
fPSA% cutoff of 19% for a population of 41 men with tPSA values
between 3 and 4 µg/liter to obtain a 90% sensitivity and to detect
one cancer per 1.7 biopsies. For different tPSA ranges <4 µg/liter,
Catalona et al. (63, 64, 65)
also reported on
various retrospective and prospective studies. In a population of 120
men with initial PSA levels between 2.8 and 4 µg/liter who had
undergone biopsies, 7% were diagnosed with PCa (63)
.
However, during the next 4 years, PCa was detected in an additional
15%. With a cutoff of 23% fPSA, the test could identify 93% of men
with cancer and would avoid 28% of negative biopsies
(63)
. Another study on 914 screening volunteers with a
normal DRE and serum PSA levels between 2.6 and 4 µg/liter discovered
90% of all PCa at a 27% fPSA cutoff (64)
. The rate of
81% organ-confined tumors showed similarity to the above-mentioned
findings by Schröder et al. (60)
, whereas
a Gleason score
7 was examined in 11.8% of all cases
(64)
compared with 48% by Schröder et
al. (60)
. Altogether, the additional usefulness of
fPSA% for tPSA values <4 µg/liter is clearly visible, although two
studies could not confirm these data (66
, 67)
.
| Factors Influencing fPSA% |
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tPSA.
Data from various studies have described an inverse relationship
between fPSA% and tPSA (reviewed in Ref. 8
). Thus, higher
tPSA levels are more commonly associated with lower fPSA% values and
are often associated with advanced PCa. For the generally accepted tPSA
ranges, where fPSA% offers the best chance for detecting PCa, a
possible tPSA effect within 24 µg/liter or within 410 µg/liter
should be considered as almost negligible. One recent study on patients
with nonmalignant disease with a slightly larger tPSA range of
2.69.9 µg/liter revealed no correlation of fPSA% to tPSA
(68)
. A more recent multicenter study on 229 cancer
patients and 1480 noncancer patients clearly demonstrated a significant
decrease of the mean fPSA% for the tPSA ranges from <4 µg/liter to
410 µg/liter and to >10 µg/liter in both patient groups
(69)
. Additional studies are required to indicate whether
a shift of the fPSA% cutoff for tPSA levels <4 µg/liter is
practicable and useful.
Stage and Grade.
Although tPSA directly correlates with tumor stage, this test cannot
accurately predict the individual final pathological stage for a
patient (70)
. Despite the demonstrated ability of fPSA%
to improve the PCa detection rate at concentrations <10 µg/liter,
reports of the utility of fPSA% for staging PCa has been
controversial. Some authors described an inverse correlation of
fPSA% to the pathological stage (71, 72, 73)
. Other studies
noted no significant improvement in staging (74, 75, 76)
. A
low fPSA% value appears to be associated with tumors of higher Gleason
scores (73
, 77
, 78)
. Recently, a prospective, multicenter
clinical trial study demonstrated that fPSA% followed by Gleason sum
were the strongest predictors for the postoperative pathological
outcome (79)
. This indicates a potential close
relationship between both parameters.
Tumor Aggressiveness.
A retrospective study on 1748 men yielded a very low risk to develop a
PCa within 10 years if tPSA is <3 µg/liter and fPSA% is >18%
(80)
. On the other side, the risk of having PCa is not
negligible if the fPSA% is
18% despite a low tPSA of <3 µg/liter
(80)
. A current study on 368 patients within the tPSA
range of 2.514 µg/liter predicted a risk of 46% having PCa if the
fPSA% is <10% (65)
. In addition, lower fPSA% levels
appear to be associated with unfavorable pathological findings such as
larger tumors, higher Gleason scores, capsular penetration, and
positive surgical margins (65
, 78
, 79)
. In a comparison of
aggressive and nonaggressive PCas, it was demonstrated that the fPSA%
values in patients with aggressive tumors were significantly lower 10
years before diagnosis, whereas tPSA did not show a difference at the
time of diagnosis (81)
. Li et al.
(77)
confirmed the inverse relation of fPSA% to a higher
aggressiveness of the histological grade. fPSA% appears to be a better
predictor for tumor aggressiveness and pathological outcome than tPSA
(71
, 73
, 78
, 79
, 81)
. These results emphasize the
importance of fPSA% for potentially detecting unfavorable pathological
findings in PCa even if the tPSA value looks inconspicuous.
PIN.
High grade PIN is most likely a precursor of PCa and often is
associated with this malignancy (82)
. An isolated high
grade PIN leaves a 15-fold increase in the relative risk of an
undiagnosed PCa (83
, 84)
. Several studies were performed
to answer the question of whether PIN affects the fPSA% value in
serum. Tarle et al. (85)
found an intermediate
mean value of fPSA% in patients with PIN (16.9%) compared with BPH
(29.1%) and PCa (14.4%). However, 50% of patients with PIN were
subsequently diagnosed with PCa, and the undetected concomitance of
both diseases may have influenced the fPSA% value. Kilic et
al. (86)
evaluated mean decreasing fPSA% levels
starting from BPH (31%) to low-grade PIN (25%), high-grade PIN
(21%), and ultimately PCa (14%), but the difference between
high-grade PIN and PCa was not significant. A multivariate analysis of
sextant biopsies on 570 men showed no fPSA% differences between BPH
(15.8%) and BPH associated with PIN (14.1%) and PCa (9.7%) compared
with PCa coincident with PIN (11%), revealing no influence of PIN
alone on fPSA% (87)
. Recently, the author confirmed these
results on radical prostatectomy specimens (88)
. Ramos
et al. (84)
focused the investigation of
patients with high-grade PIN and a longer negative follow-up for PCa to
exclude a possible effect of concomitant PCa. They observed nearly
similar fPSA% patterns for BPH and high-grade PIN and a significant
difference between both patient groups to PCa patients.
Especially the latter three studies suggest that high-grade PIN has little influence on fPSA% (84 , 87 , 88) . Because of the integrity of the basal cell layer in PIN tissue as opposed to PCa tissue, it can be assumed that PSA from PIN tissue will not take the same "direct" way into circulation, which probably leads to higher serum concentrations of cPSA in PCa patients (45) . Therefore, it seems that an isolated PIN may not lower the fPSA% as would a PCa, so that a decreased fPSA% value should be always considered as evidence of PCa.
Chronic Prostatic Inflammation.
Patients with chronic inflammation of the prostate show fPSA% values
comparable with those of patients suffering from PCa (89)
.
Ornstein et al. (68)
found no difference in
fPSA% between patients with acute inflammation of the prostate and
nonmalignant patients for tPSA concentrations of 2.69.9
µg/liter. However, only 6 of 50 patients had no evidence of chronic
inflammation, so its effect on fPSA% could not be evaluated
(68)
. Recently, Morote et al. (90)
also showed no influence of inflammation on tPSA and fPSA%, but
only 23.2% of all patients were without inflammation. Contrarily,
Scattoni et al. (91)
confirmed the results of
Jung et al. (89)
. In particular, in the study
by Scattoni et al. (91)
, patients with an
inactive form of prostatitis appeared to have a relatively higher risk
of a f PSA% of <18%.
These divergent results make a final conclusion regarding the common pathological diagnosis of a chronic inflammation and its impact on fPSA% difficult. However, the urologist should bear in mind this possibility of a false-positive result.
Age.
It is generally accepted that there is a positive correlation between
age and tPSA (31
, 92, 93, 94)
. The fPSA also increases with
increasing age, but the fPSA% remains unchanged (93)
. We
have also observed that fPSA% was independent of age in 1160 healthy
volunteers (95)
. Kalish et al.
(94)
confirmed the independence of fPSA% of age. In
contrast, other recent studies have found a decrease of fPSA% with
increasing age (96
, 97)
or an increase of fPSA% with mean
patient age (31
, 68
, 69)
.
These conflicting results could be explained by the use of various assays (98) or by the biological variation of fPSA (99 , 100) . To date, a definitive assessment of the relationship of fPSA% to patients age is not possible.
Race.
Comparisons of PCa patients have shown that tPSA concentration at
diagnosis is higher in black men than in white men and that there is a
higher incidence of more aggressive tumors in black men (101
, 102)
. The probability of having PCa in black patients at tPSA
410 µg/liter is 30% compared with 25% in white patients
(5)
. The objective of a recent multi-institutional study
was to evaluate whether a selected fPSA% cutoff for white men yielded
the same efficiency in black men and whether fPSA% was useful in
predicting pathological features in black patients, too
(103)
. A total of 764 patients with tPSA values between 4
and 10 µg/liter, nonsuspicious DRE, and histologically confirmed
diagnosis were enrolled. At the fPSA% cutoff of 25%, both races
attained 95% sensitivity, whereas 20% of unnecessary biopsies
could have been avoided in white men and 17% in black men. In both
races, higher fPSA% values indicated a lower risk of PCa and also
predicted a favorable pathological outcome (103)
. The
apparent similarity in fPSA% results are promising for a possible
race-independent prospective use. However, another recent study
indicated that 32% of black men would not have been diagnosed with
cancer at the 25%-fPSA% cutoff compared with only 13% of white men,
even though the median fPSA% values did not differ between both
races (104)
.
Prostate Volume.
Catalona et al. (28)
and Partin et
al. (31)
found an increase in fPSA% with increasing
gland volumes. We observed a similar relationship for PCa, whereas
fPSA% in nonmalignant patients was independent of prostate volume
(105
, 106)
. We evaluated the influence of different
factors on fPSA% in 760 men (105)
. Prostate volume was
found to have a remarkable impact on the ratio of fPSA:tPSA. If
prostate volume does not exceed 40 ml, fPSA% can further enhance the
ability to distinguish between BPH and PCa (106)
. More
recently, Haese et al. (107)
could confirm the
diagnostic advantage of fPSA% for a gland volume of <60 ml. Ornstein
et al. (68)
found the positive relationship of
fPSA% to prostate volume also in patients with only benign prostate
diseases. To date, a multicenter study on 1709 men provided additional
verification of the dependence of fPSA% on prostate volume in
cancer and nonmalignant cases, demonstrating a significant positive
correlation between fPSA% and gland volume (69)
.
| fPSA% as Helpful Tool for Prostate Biopsy |
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Table 2
indicates our preliminary recommendation to perform a prostate biopsy
depending on fPSA% values within three different tPSA ranges measured
with the IMMULITE fPSA and tPSA assays (109)
. For a repeat
biopsy, we advise a 15% cutoff on fPSA within the gray zone (tPSA
range 410 µg/liter) with an unsuspicious DRE. At this cut-point,
the efficiency (e.g., sum of sensitivity and specificity)
has the highest value. For tPSA concentrations between 2 and 4
µg/liters, a biopsy should be performed only if the fPSA% is <9%.
However, aggressive cancer may be missed at this low fPSA% cutoff
(65
, 80)
. Thus, our preliminary decision criteria and
recommendations (Table 2)
should be considered as a starting point for
other studies underway and for future studies. Additional prospective
validations on larger cohorts are required for a definitive cutoff
selection, especially for low tPSA levels (<4 µg/liter).
|
Because the urologists are using the fPSA% especially in patients with
one negative biopsy to decide about further biopsies, the power of this
marker has been discussed controversially. Stephan et al.
(109)
do not suggest a repeat biopsy if the fPSA% is
>21%. In this group of patients, only 5% of cancers would be missed.
Hayek et al. (110)
detected PCa in 15.7% of
all repeat biopsies, but concluded that no additional information was
provided by fPSA% for a biopsy decision. In a recent large prospective
study,
10% of all initial negative biopsies were diagnosed with PCa
in a repeat biopsy (111)
. In that study, fPSA% was the
most accurate predictor of PCa in repeat biopsy specimens.
| Should fPSA% Be Used Generally in Screening for PCa? |
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10% of all PSA
measurements are in the tPSA zone of only 410 µg/liter, and 85% of
all men have a PSA value <4 µg/liter, a general additional use of
fPSA in every tPSA determination seems ineffective. However, expanding
the range of additional fPSA measurements from 410 µg/liter to
210 µg/liter could be beneficial for detecting more PCas at low
tPSA values. | Additional Notes for Accurate Interpretation of FPSA |
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1%/h of clotting time,
23%/day, and subsequently 6090%/month at 4°C or 23°C, but
only 0.9% and 0.4%/month if stored at -20°C or -70°C,
respectively (114)
. On the basis of these data, it is
recommended to process and store the samples at 4°C within 24 h
after blood sampling. Storage for longer than 24 h should be done
at -70°C (114)
. A storage for more than 2 years at
-70°C also showed no decline in fPSA and tPSA samples
(115)
. Similar data have been reported by other authors
(116, 117, 118)
.
PSA Clearance Rates.
A comprehensive summary of PSA clearance rates is described in a review
by Stenman (45)
. Because it is known that PSA in serum
occurs in different molecular forms, several studies were performed to
measure the half-life of fPSA, cPSA, and tPSA after radical
prostatectomy. Biphasic models were established for elimination
kinetics of fPSA and tPSA. Regarding fPSA, the first fast phase is
presumably a result of the rapid loss of fPSA with an average half-life
of approximately 0.52 h, whereas the slower second phase has
half-life periods between 13.9 and 22 h (119, 120, 121)
.
The initial and rapid decrease of fPSA may also be a result of new
complexes forming with ACT and A2M (122)
. However,
other authors assumed a rapid extracellular redistribution or
glomerular filtration of fPSA (119
, 123)
.
Knowledge about the faster elimination rate of fPSA compared with ACT-PSA is helpful in explaining low fPSA% values after a temporary increase of tPSA after prostate manipulations (DRE, biopsy, or ultrasound) or acute prostate inflammation. Despite an initial PSA increase after DRE, mainly attributable to a fPSA increase (124) , those relatively higher fPSA concentrations are eliminated faster than ACT-PSA and result in changing fPSA% values. Therefore, it is useful to wait 46 weeks after such an event before measuring fPSA and tPSA.
Surgical and Drug Treatment History.
Meyer et al. (105)
investigated a possible
effect of fPSA% after transurethral resection of the prostate.
Compared with untreated BPH patients, the tPSA and fPSA levels were
significantly decreased in patients treated by transurethral resection,
but fPSA% did not differ between the two groups. In the serum of
relapsing PCa patients after radical prostatectomy, the fPSA% varies
within a relatively wide range and obviously does not give additional
information (125)
.
Whereas Terazosin showed no effect on fPSA (126)
,
treatment of BPH with 5
-reductase inhibitor finasteride decreased
tPSA by
50% in men without PCa (16)
. Despite the lower
tPSA level, fPSA% did not significantly change in relation to
untreated patients (105
, 126, 127, 128)
. Although these studies
suggest a possible continuous use of fPSA% for detecting PCa in
treated BPH patients, additional prospective clinical trials are
necessary to support these findings.
| PSA Complexes |
|---|
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|---|
However, several analytical difficulties, such as the loss of immunoreactivity, complex dissociation during long-term storage, or the overrecovery caused by the presence of ACT-cathepsin G complex, impaired accurate ACT-PSA measurement (131, 132, 133, 134) . All these early technical problems in ACT-PSA determination explain why fPSA and the fPSA:tPSA ratio, and not ACT-PSA, were introduced first into clinical practice. Recently, the use of monoclonal antibodies specifically against ACT-PSA with low cross-reactivities to the ACT-cathepsin G complex, ACT and fPSA (135) , the addition of heparin in the reaction mixture (133) , and the application of special blocking reagents to reduce the nonspecific binding of anti-ACT antibodies (134) have been recommended to improve the analytical performance of ACT-PSA measurements.
Because of the analytical problems mentioned above, the results of
ACT-PSA determinations are conflicting and are discussed
controversially (19
, 134
, 136, 137, 138)
. Some authors
recommend the measurement of ACT-PSA and the calculation of the
ACT-PSA:tPSA ratio instead of fPSA% in view of a better
differentiation between PCa and BPH (19
, 21
, 134
, 138)
. In
addition to the advantageous use of ACT-PSA to fPSA%, Espana et
al. (137)
also provided higher specificity using
citrated plasma instead of serum. Using a prototype assay for ACT-PSA
in serum, we did not find enhanced utility for ACT-PSA and the
calculated derivatives for differentiation between PCa and BPH compared
with fPSA% (139)
. As shown in Fig. 1
, fPSA% had the greatest area under the ROC curve followed by the
fPSA:ACT-PSA ratio, ACT-PSA, tPSA, and the ACT-PSA:tPSA ratio. fPSA%
offered the highest efficiency within the tPSA range of 220
µg/liter to discriminate between cancer and non-cancer patients
(139)
. These data are consistent with results from other
investigators (136
, 140, 141, 142)
. A more recent multicenter
study of 657 men for tPSAs of 220 µg/liter confirmed strongly that
ACT-PSA alone was not better than fPSA%, and the ratio of ACT-PSA to
tPSA corresponds to the diagnostic power of
fPSA%.5
|
Using this newly developed assay, Brawer et al. (145) reported that cPSA alone was a better discriminator between PCa and BPH than tPSA or fPSA% in the tPSA range of 410 µg/liter. In a cohort of 36 PCa patients and 117 patients with no evidence of malignancy, the cPSA showed the greatest area under the ROC curve (0.73). Moreover, tPSA was also better than fPSA% (areas under the ROC curves were 0.66 versus 0.6). This contradicts several studies showing that fPSA% significantly enhances the specificity for tPSA values <10 µg/liter (28 , 29 , 31 , 32 , 54 , 55) . The findings of lower values for fPSA% compared with tPSA in the area under the ROC curve indicate inappropriate cohorts (144) .
Jung et al. (57)
could not show an advantage of
cPSA alone at tPSAs of 210 µg/liter in reducing the rate of
unnecessary biopsies (see Fig. 2A and B
). On the other hand, the ratios fPSA:tPSA
and cPSA:tPSA, both comparable, improved the differentiation between
PCa and BPH related to tPSA (57)
. Similarly to fPSA%, the
ratio cPSA:tPSA can significantly enhance the specificity and thus
reduce the rate of inappropriate prostate biopsies. Meanwhile, other
research groups confirmed that the ratio of fPSA:tPSA is still superior
to cPSA alone (135
, 146)
.
|
Finally, it should be noted that the cPSA assay also measures the relatively small amounts of API-PSA complex, which is more associated with benign disease compared with the main complex of ACT-PSA, which is higher in PCa (144 , 150) . This could lead to a diagnostic uncertainty in interpreting the cPSA value. Furthermore, it cannot be excluded that the capture monoclonal antibody MM1 still detects fPSA despite blocking the fPSA epitope E because of different fPSA epitope-recognition of MM1 and ME2 (143) . This could lead to a slight overestimation of cPSA.
Despite the limiting factors for cPSA, the analytical reliability is superior to ACT-PSA. Measurements of both tPSA and cPSA have displayed a comparable utility to fPSA and tPSA (57 , 146) . Regarding the analytical advantage of cPSA compared with fPSA, because of the greater serum concentration and the presumed higher stability of cPSA, it cannot be ruled out that the percentage of cPSA may be prospectively more useful than fPSA%. Additional studies are required to compare fPSA% and the cPSA:tPSA ratio to answer this question.
A2M-PSA.
Since the middle of the last decade, different research groups have
investigated the immunological detection of the A2M-PSA complex
(25
, 47
, 151
, 152)
. Under in vivo and in
vitro conditions, PSA was found to bind more rapidly and
more aggressively to A2M than to ACT (25
, 47
, 151)
. An early immunoassay partially measured A2M-PSA only at
high tPSA levels with an insufficient detection limit of 3 µg/liter
(152)
. Overall, the main difficulty was the encapsulation
of PSA because of A2M and the subsequent loss of PSA immunoreactive
epitopes. Recently, Zhang et al. (27)
described
an assay with an acceptable detection limit of 0.14 µg/liter. Their
method is based on removal of all immunoreactive PSA from serum by
immunoadsorption and release of the encapsulated PSA from A2M by pH
variation. At a 30%-PSA recovery rate of the A2M-PSA, the median
ratios of A2M-PSA:PSA were 12% for PCa patients and 17% in BPH
patients.
ACT-PSA and A2M-PSA complexes bind to the A2M receptor/low-density lipoprotein receptor, which may be the clearance receptor for PSA (153) . Kinetic analysis revealed faster binding of PSA to A2M than to ACT, confirming earlier suggestions. Because of the extremely short half-life of A2M and the rapid binding of PSA to A2M, it was hypothesized that common measurements of PSA incorrectly calculate the PSA concentrations when released from the prostate into circulation (153) . Using radiolabeled PSA injected into rats, Birkenmeier et al. (154) was able to demonstrate recently that A2M-PSA is solely eliminated by the liver, whereas ACT-PSA is eliminated by the liver and by the kidney. Thus, factors that modulate the elimination receptors or organs may interfere with the steady-state concentration of the different molecular forms of PSA, keeping in mind that A2M is the main inhibitor of PSA in blood. It has been suggested by Stenman that the sum of A2M-PSA and fPSA in serum might reflect the complete or real fPSA fraction in vivo because of in vitro complex formation between fPSA and A2M after sampling (155) . The parallelism of higher frPSA and higher A2M-PSA levels in BPH patients may further improve differentiation between BPH and PCa.
In contrast with the measured A2M-PSA values up to 49 µg/liter by Zhang et al. (27) , another report by Lilja et al. (123) could not confirm these high concentrations of A2M-PSA. Lilja et al. (123) developed an assay with a detection limit of 2 µg/liter. Only 1 of 18 PCa patients had a measurable A2M-PSA concentration. After radical prostatectomy, almost all A2M-PSA concentrations were below the analytical detection limit.
As the analytical problems of the A2M-PSA measurements have not yet been resolved, estimation of the clinical validity of A2M-PSA remains difficult.
API-PSA.
The development of highly sensitive immunoassays for detecting
additional PSA complexes has gained more attention in the last years.
To date, none of these tests are commercially available. After Zhang
et al. (156)
indicated that PSA slowly forms a
complex with API in vitro, the same group developed an assay
analogous to the ACT-PSA assay with an antibody specific for API
(150)
. The differences in the median API-PSA:tPSA ratios
were significant between PCa (3.2%) and BPH patients (4.1%). Despite
the relatively low proportions of API-PSA to tPSA concentrations, these
results warrant additional investigations on a possible utility of
API-PSA as an adjunct to the other molecular forms of PSA in serum.
| hK2 |
|---|
|
|
|---|
hK2 manifests a trypsin-like substrate specificity (168
, 169)
, whereas PSA has a restricted chymotrypsin-like activity
(170)
. It has been suggested that the regulation of hK2 is
inhibited by zinc (166)
. hK2 also forms complexes with
various plasma protease inhibitors such as
2-antiplasmin, antithrombin III,
C1-inactivator, plasminogen activator inhibitor-1, and A2M
(171, 172, 173)
. All molecular forms of hK2 in prostatic
tissue, seminal plasma, and serum or plasma are summarized in Table 1
.
As opposed to PSA, hK2 can activate the zymogen form of urokinase (174) . This shows that hK2 has potential plasmin-like activity and suggests that hK2 could be the initiator of a proteolytic cascade leading to prostatic cancer invasion (174) . In 1997, hK2 had been shown to cleave proPSA to generate enzymatically active PSA (169 , 175 , 176) . This suggests that hK2 may play a physiological role in the regulation of PSA activity. Hence, it has been presumed that these two molecules also might act in concert in extraprostatic locations. Until now, PSA and hK2 have been found and measured together in biological fluids and tissues, e.g., in amniotic fluid, breast milk, breast cyst fluid, and in malignant and nonmalignant breast tissue. In other tissues, such as in pituitary tissues and human endometrium, only the mRNAs for hK2 and PSA have been detected (177, 178, 179, 180, 181, 182, 183) . The hK2 concentrations were always approximately two orders of magnitude lower than PSA or hK2 in serum and seminal plasma.
hK2 was also detected in the urine. Like PSA in urine, it is not clinically useful for early detection or staging of PCa (184) , but both proteins are down-regulated in urine and plasma after antiandrogen treatment (185) .
hK2 in Prostatic Tissue.
Initial immunohistochemical studies revealed differences in the
expression of hK2 and PSA. PSA immunoreactivity was most intensive in
benign epithelium and stained to a lesser extent in PIN and to the
least extent in prostate carcinoma. In contrast, hK2
intensity and extent were greatest in cancer with the most intense
staining in the highest grades of cancer with less intense staining by
PIN and the lowest in benign epithelium (186
, 187)
. Darson
et al. (188)
demonstrated in 151 radical
prostatectomy patients with lymph node-positive PCa a higher
expression of hK2 in lymph node metastases than in primary cancer.
Furthermore, the hK2 expression in primary cancer was greater than in
benign epithelium (188)
. prohK2 was expressed in a
greater percentage of cells in primary cancer than in benign tissue. In
contrast to hK2, prohK2 and PSA were expressed to a greater extent in
primary PCa than in lymph node metastases. Consequently, the authors
assumed that the prostate tissue expression of hK2 appears to be
regulated independently of PSA (188)
.
Magklara et al. (189) measured hK2 and PSA concentrations in paired cancerous and noncancerous prostatic tissue using sensitive and specific immunofluorometric procedures. Similar to the relations of PSA and hK2 in seminal plasma and male serum, hK2 only presents 12% of the PSA concentration in prostate tissue. Both prostate kallikreins are expressed more in noncancerous than in cancerous tissue, whereby the degree of down-regulation was higher for PSA than for hK2 (189) . These findings are in contradiction to previous data generated by immunohistochemistry (186 , 188) . A recent study on aspiration biopsy material showed that the down-regulation of tissue PSA in PCa patients can predict the outcome of endocrine treatments better than clinical classifications such as tumor stage and cytological grade (190) . Thus, the physiological mechanism of the intracellular PSA and hK2 regulation requires additional investigation.
Recently, a novel hK2 complex was identified in prostate tissue consisting of hK2 and a serine protease inhibitor known as PI-6 (191) . This complex represents about 10% of thK2 in the tissue and is increased in the tumor tissue. Interestingly, no comparable complex of PSA and PI-6 was detected (191) . Whether this PI-6-hK2 complex itself is variable in tumor tissue compared with benign tissue or correlates with early neoplastic development should be investigated further.
hK2 in Serum.
As already mentioned, serum concentrations of hK2 are usually <3% of
the PSA concentrations (192
, 193)
. This finding verified
the early analytical difficulties for hK2 immunoassays, because lower
detection limits were above the biological concentrations of hK2 in
serum. The first assays had an analytical detection limit (signal
imprecision + 2 SD of the zero calibrator) of 100 ng/liter
(193)
. The assays of the recent generation have an
analytical detection limit of <10 ng/liter (192
, 194, 195, 196)
. However, clearly different concentrations in healthy
men have been measured (192
, 196)
. The reasons for these
discrepancies were not known until now (197)
.
Analogous to PSA, hK2 in serum exists in different molecular forms (193 , 198) . Free hK2 is the most abundant form in serum (198) , whereas ACT-hK2 represents only 419% of thK2 (195) . The zymogen form of hK2, prohK2, is also present in human sera and increased in prostate diseases (199) . Although very sensitive analytical hK2 assays are essential for studies of serum hK2, equimolar tests may not be as important as for PSA because of the relatively low proportions of complexed hK2 in serum.
Klee et al. (192) developed an ultrasensitive automated assay for hK2 with a detection limit of 1.5 ng/liter. The median serum concentration of hK2 was 26 ng/liter in healthy men. PCa patients with lower Gleason scores had a median hK2 concentration of 72 ng/liter compared with 116 ng/liter in patients with a more advanced cancer (192) . A recent study by Becker et al. (200) indicated that increased hK2 concentrations are associated with an increase of aggressive PCa. Furthermore, for differentiation between BPH and PCa patients, the calculated ratio hK2:fPSA significantly enhanced the specificity at the 95% sensitivity level (200) .
This phenomenon was first described by Kwiatkowski et al. (194) . For tPSA values of 410 µg/liter, they found a median hK2 of 135 ng/liter in PCa patients and a median hK2 of 90 ng/liter in BPH patients (P < 0.1). The ratio of hK2:fPSA showed the highest significance in discriminating PCa and BPH, whereas the ratio hK2:tPSA could not increase the efficiency compared with the ratio fPSA:tPSA (194) . Later, these findings were established on a larger patient population (201) . A study on 937 archived serum samples by Partin et al. (202) for tPSA concentrations of 210 µg/liter demonstrated an advantage in combining the fPSA% and the hK2:fPSA ratio for detecting PCa. Regarding the fPSA% values within the tPSA range of 24 µg/liter, the additional use of hK2:fPSA would identify as many as 40% of the cancers and would require biopsy in only 16.5% of the men with these low-tPSA concentrations (202) . Magklara et al. (203) studied the effect of the three-parameter fPSA, tPSA, and hK2 on 206 PCa and BPH patients at tPSAs of 2.510 µg/liter. hK2 alone was not shown to distinguish between PCa and BPH (202 , 203) . Again, only the ratio hK2:fPSA provides additional information. The authors suggest prostate biopsy if the hK2:fPSA ratio is >1 within the tPSA range of 2.54.5 µg/liter because of a 35% likelihood of having cancer (203) . A study by Nam et al. (204) among men referred for prostate biopsy illustrated a 5- to 8-fold increase in risk for PCa at high hK2 levels, adjusted to PSA and other risk factors. The results of two recent studies suggest a significant increase of hK2 concentrations with increasing grading levels, especially for non-organ-confined cancers (205 , 206) .
These preliminary studies on the diagnostic validity of hK2 already demonstrate the potential usefulness of the new marker hK2 as a valuable adjunct to the established PSA values and multivariate analyses (207 , 208) for an improved differentiation between PCa and BPH. However, more work has to be done to make this test ready to use in clinical practice. Two points have priority: (a) larger multicenter studies are essential to prove the clinical usefulness of hK2 in comparison with conventional parameters in prostate carcinoma diagnostics; and (b) technical problems to measure the different molecular forms of hK2 using appropriate antibodies have to be solved. In particular, the recent report on an accurate and specific assay for complexed hK2 may provide additional enhanced specificity (209) .
| Conclusion and Future Trends |
|---|
|
|
|---|
|
The use of the other molecular forms of PSA and hK2 offers interesting and promising approaches for additional improvements in differentiating BPH from PCa. When the analytical problems are resolved, these parameters should be evaluated in clinical trials to test the possibility of adding information in PCa detection. We expect rapid progress in the whole area of PCa research within the next few years.
In conclusion, we predict that better insight in regard to PSA and hK2 molecular forms will lead not only to better diagnostic markers, but also to an understanding of PCa development and possible new therapeutic options.
| Acknowledgments |
|---|
| Footnotes |
|---|
1 Supported by the following sources, fellowships,
or grants: Boehringer Ingelheim Foundation (to C. S.), Deutsche
Forschungsgemeinschaft (to K. J.), Funds of the German Chemical
Industry (to K. J.), Familie-Klee-Stiftung (to M. L.), and the
Sonnenfeld-Stiftung (to S. A. L.). ![]()
2 All authors contributed equally to this
report. ![]()
3 To whom requests for reprints should be
addressed, at Department of Urology, University Hospital Charité,
Schumannstrasse 20/21, D-10098 Berlin, Germany. Fax: 49-30-28021402;
E-mail: klaus.jung{at}charite.de ![]()
4 The abbreviations used are: PCa, prostate
cancer; PSA, prostate-specific antigen; ACT,
1-antichymotrypsin; A2M,