New
Test Identifies Most Dangerous Prostate Cancers
A new
way of measuring the aggressiveness of prostate cancer could someday
cut in half the number of men with the disease who have their prostates
surgically removed.
Whether
a man with prostate cancer needs a prostatectomy often hinges on what
is called his Gleason score, a test that grades the tumor based on its
appearance under a microscope. The Gleason score, which has been used
for decades, determines how advanced the cancer is, grading the malignancy
on a score of 2 to 10. If the score is 6 or higher, the physician is
likely to perform a prostatectomy, removing the entire gland.
A prostatectomy
is done to save lives, but it is an unpleasant experience because one
of the possible adverse effects is impotence.
But
researchers at the University of Minnesota, where Dr. Donald F. Gleason
first developed the test, have come up with a new test that could single
out those who would benefit from a prostatectomy from those who would
not necessarily need the operation.
New
Prostate Cancer Test Hold Promise
The
new test determines how aggressively the cancer is growing and spreading
through the body. Its assessment is based not on the appearance of cancer
cells but on their biochemistry, Gleason says. It is actually two interlocked
tests, measuring levels of two molecules produced by the cancer cells.
"One
is an enzyme called cathepsin B," says the study's lead author, Akhouri
A. Sinha, a professor of genetics, cell biology, and development at
the University of Minnesota Cancer Center. "It is produced in every
solid tumor and has the ability to dissolve connective tissue, which
stimulates spread of the cancer throughout the body.
"I
have also looked at an inhibitor of cathepsin B, stefin A. What we have
done is to take the ratio of cathepsin B to stefin A. If the ratio of
cathepsin B to stefin A is high, the cancer is likely to grow and spread
aggressively. This provides an excellent test to predict the progression
of the cancer," he adds.
New
Test Yields Positive Results
Sinha
and his colleagues at the university and the Minneapolis Veterans Affairs
Medical Center ran the test on 97 men whose prostate cancers graded
6 or higher on the Gleason test. They found an excellent correlation
between the ratio of the two molecules and the progression of the disease,
with differences among men whose Gleason scores were identical.
One
existing way to judge a prostate cancer is to measure levels of prostate-specific
antigen, PSA. If those levels rise after the prostate is removed, the
chance of a recurrence is high. The new test predicted such recurrences
before PSA levels rose, Sinha says.
What
This Means For the Future of Prostate Cancer Treatment
What
he sees in the future is use of the new test for all men with prostate
cancer. "You can take a small biopsy and do the test in the hospital,"
he says. "Any competent clinical laboratory can do it."
And,
more important, he adds, "If 100 men are diagnosed with a Gleason score
6, now all the prostates come out. Our projection is that 50 to 52 percent
of them should not have a prostatectomy, because they do not have aggressive
tumors. They can play golf and enjoy their lives. The others should
have their prostate cancers treated very aggressively, because the tumors
are likely to return in less than five years."
But
the newly reported study is just the first step toward that future,
Sinha says. "What we need to do now is a prospective study to correlate
results with biopsy data. We are hoping that someone will want to do
it, and we will help to set it up."
Discussions
about such a study have already begun with researchers at another institute,
Sinha says.
Gleason,
who is an emeritus professor of pathology at Minnesota, is listed among
the authors of the study, which is published in the journal Cancer.
But he cheerfully admits, "I was lucky to have my name attached to it."
Retired
for several years, he acknowledges that the Gleason test "made me famous.
It is in use all over the world -- Russia, China, Japan."
Always
consult your physician for more information.
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