Enhanced discrimination of benign from malignant prostatic disease by selective measurements of cleaved forms of urokinase receptor in serum Journal Article


Authors: Pilronen, T.; Haese, A.; Huland, H.; Steuber, T.; Christensen, I. J.; Brünner, N.; Danø, K.; Høyer-Hansen, G.; Lilja, H.
Article Title: Enhanced discrimination of benign from malignant prostatic disease by selective measurements of cleaved forms of urokinase receptor in serum
Abstract: Background: Early detection of prostate cancer (PCa) centers on measurements of prostate-specific antigen (PSA), but current testing practices suffer from lack of specificity and generate many unnecessary prostate biopsies. Soluble urokinase plasminogen activator receptor (uPAR) is present in blood in both intact and cleaved forms. Increased uPAR in blood is correlated with poor prognosis in various cancers, but uPAR has not been shown to be useful in PCa diagnostics. We assessed the ability of immunoassays for specific uPAR forms to discriminate PCa from benign conditions. Methods: We measured total PSA (tPSA), free PSA (fPSA), intact uPAR [uPAR(I-III)], intact uPAR + cleaved uPAR domains II+III [uPAR(I-III) + uPAR(II-III)], and cleaved uPAR domain I [uPAR(I)] in sera from 224 men with and 166 men without PCa. We assessed differences in serum concentrations between the PCa and noncancer groups within the entire cohort and in men with tPSA concentrations of 2-10 μg/L. The diagnostic accuracy of individual analytes and analyte combinations was explored by logistic regression and ROC analyses and evaluations of sensitivity and specificity pairs. Results: Serum uPAR(I) and uPAR(I-III) were higher in PCa than in benign disease. In men with tPSA between 2 and 10 μg/L, the combination of %fPSA with the ratio uPAR(I)/uPAR(I-III) had a greater area under the ROC curve (0.73) than did %fPSA (0.68). Conclusions: Specific measurements of different uPAR forms in serum improve the specificity of PCa detection. The uPAR forms may therefore be complementary to PSA for PCa detection, most importantly in men with moderately increased PSA. © 2006 American Association for Clinical Chemistry.
Keywords: adult; aged; middle aged; major clinical study; sensitivity and specificity; prostate specific antigen; diagnosis, differential; prostate cancer; prostate-specific antigen; prostatic neoplasms; antigen specificity; blood sampling; early diagnosis; measurement; malignant neoplastic disease; immunoassay; multivariate analysis; prostate hypertrophy; prostatic hyperplasia; benign tumor; diagnostic test; regression analysis; roc curve; receptors, cell surface; urokinase receptor; urinary plasminogen activator
Journal Title: Clinical Chemistry
Volume: 52
Issue: 5
ISSN: 0009-9147
Publisher: American Association for Clinical Chemistry  
Date Published: 2006-05-01
Start Page: 838
End Page: 844
Language: English
DOI: 10.1373/clinchem.2005.064253
PUBMED: 16543389
PROVIDER: scopus
DOI/URL:
Notes: --- - "Cited By (since 1996): 27" - "Export Date: 4 June 2012" - "CODEN: CLCHA" - "Source: Scopus"
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  1. Hans Gosta Lilja
    343 Lilja