Association of reported prostate cancer risk alleles with PSA levels among men without a diagnosis of prostate cancer Journal Article


Authors: Wiklund, F.; Zheng, S. L.; Sun, J.; Adami, H. O.; Lilja, H.; Hsu, F. C.; Stattin, P.; Adolfsson, J.; Cramer, S. D.; Duggan, D.; Carpten, J. D.; Chang, B. L.; Isaacs, W. B.; Grönberg, H.; Xu, J.
Article Title: Association of reported prostate cancer risk alleles with PSA levels among men without a diagnosis of prostate cancer
Abstract: BACKGROUND. Prostate specific antigen (PSA) is widely used for prostate cancer screening but its levels are influenced by many non cancer-related factors. The goal of the study is to estimate the effect of genetic variants on PSA levels. METHODS. We evaluated the association of SNPs that were reported to be associated with prostate cancer risk in recent genome-wide association studies with plasma PSA levels in a Swedish study population, including 1,722 control subjects without a diagnosis of prostate cancer. RESULTS. Of the 16 SNPs analyzed in control subjects, significant associations with PSA levels (P ≤ 0.05) were found for six SNPs. These six SNPs had a cumulative effect on PSA levels; the mean PSA levels in men were almost twofold increased across increasing quintile of number of PSA associated alleles, P-trend = 3.4 × 10,<sup>-14</sup>. In this Swedish study population risk allele frequencies were similar among T1c case patients (cancer detected by elevated PSA levels alone) as compared to T2 and above prostate cancer case patients. CONCLUSIONS. Results from this study may have two important clinical implications. The cumulative effect of six SNPs on PSA levels suggests genetic-specific PSA cutoff values may be used to improve the discriminatory performance of this test for prostate cancer; and the dual associations of these SNPs with PSA levels and prostate cancer risk raise a concern that some of reported prostate cancer risk-associated SNPs may be confounded by the prevalent use of PSA screening. © 2008 Wiley-Liss, Inc.
Keywords: controlled study; major clinical study; single nucleotide polymorphism; case control study; genetics; case-control studies; polymorphism, single nucleotide; cancer risk; cancer diagnosis; prostate specific antigen; genetic predisposition to disease; genetic variability; gene frequency; risk factors; cancer screening; risk factor; prostate cancer; sweden; prostate-specific antigen; prostatic neoplasms; genome analysis; blood; register; registries; prostate tumor; multivariate analysis; genetic predisposition; bias; genetic; klk3
Journal Title: Prostate
Volume: 69
Issue: 4
ISSN: 0270-4137
Publisher: John Wiley & Sons  
Date Published: 2009-03-01
Start Page: 419
End Page: 427
Language: English
DOI: 10.1002/pros.20908
PUBMED: 19116992
PROVIDER: scopus
PMCID: PMC3348520
DOI/URL:
Notes: --- - "Cited By (since 1996): 6" - "Export Date: 30 November 2010" - "CODEN: PRSTD" - "Source: Scopus"
Altmetric
Citation Impact
BMJ Impact Analytics
MSK Authors
  1. Hans Gosta Lilja
    343 Lilja