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Genetic predictors could improve PSA accuracy – ModernMedicine

Posted: February 17, 2017 at 1:45 am

Genetic predictors of normal PSA levels in healthy men could be used to improve the accuracy of PSA-based prostate cancer screening, according to findings from a joint study by researchers at the University of California, San Francisco and Kaiser Permanente, Oakland, CA.

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The aim of the study was an effort to make PSA more accurate and valuable as a prostate cancer screening tool, co-senior author John Witte, PhD, of UCSF, told Urology Times. We were basically trying to obtain personalized PSA levels whereby each person has a specific cutoff that reflects their constitutional PSA levels.

Dr. Witte explained that while PSA tests for prostate cancer were once considered valuable for early cancer detection, that thinking has changed over the last 5 years. Some studies have shown that the tests are not sensitive enough and frequent false positives lead to too many unnecessary medical procedures.

In that time, the use of the test has decreased and the number of prostate cancer diagnoses has dropped, but Dr. Witte noted that the genome-wide association study (GWAS) gives notion that the PSA test could once again regain its place in cancer prevention by factoring in genetic variations that affect the amount of PSA different men naturally produce.

The study consisted of 28,503 men from the Kaiser Permanente cohort and an additional 17,428 men from replication cohorts, with the aggregate representing nearly half a million PSA tests going back as far as 25 years.

This was a very large study of tens of thousands of subjects and hundreds of thousands of PSA levels, primarily in a Kaiser cohort, but also replicated in other study populations, Dr. Witte said.

By having access to such a rich study population, the authors were able to identify 40 genetic regions, or loci, that together predict nearly 10% of normal variation in PSA levels in men who do not have cancer.

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Genetic predictors could improve PSA accuracy - ModernMedicine

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