New biomarkers for diagnosis and prognosis of localized prostate cancer

The diagnostics and management of localized prostate cancer is complicated because of cancer heterogeneity and differentiated progression in various subgroups of patients. As a prostate cancer biomarker, FDA-approved detection assay for serum prostate specific antigen (PSA) and its derivatives are not potent enough to diagnose prostate cancer, especially high-grade disease (Gleason ≥7). To date, a collection of new biomarkers was developed. Some of these markers are superior for primary screening while others are particularly helpful for cancer risk stratification, detection of high-grade cancer, and prediction of adverse events. Two of those markers such as proPSA (a part of the Prostate Health Index (PHI)) and prostate specific antigen 3 (PCA3) (a part of the PCA3 Progensa test) were recently approved by FDA for clinical use. Other markers are not PDA-approved yet but are available from Clinical Laboratory Improvement Amendment (CLIA)-certified clinical laboratories. In this review, we characterize diagnostic performance of these markers and their diagnostic and prognostic utility for prostate cancer. © 2018 Elsevier Ltd

Authors
Chistiakov D.A.2 , Myasoedova V.A.3 , Grechko A.V. 4 , Melnichenko A.A.3 , Orekhov A.N.3, 5
Publisher
Elsevier
Language
English
Pages
9-16
Status
Published
Volume
52
Year
2018
Organizations
  • 1 Peoples’ Friendship University of Russia
  • 2 Serbsky Federal Medical Research Center for Psychiatry and Narcology
  • 3 Institute of General Pathology and Pathophysiology, Russian Academy of Medical Sciences
  • 4 Federal Scientific Clinical Center for Resuscitation and Rehabilitation
  • 5 Skolkovo Innovative Center
Keywords
Biomarker; Diagnosis; Prognosis; Prostate cancer; Prostate specific antigen
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