UE-PSA is a non-invasive biomarker to detect prostate cancer: not only old wine in new bottles.
Chunmeng WeiXi ChenJin JiYalong XuXing HeHuiyong ZhangZengnan MoFu-Bo WangPublished in: International journal of cancer (2022)
The study aimed at evaluating the performance of urinary exosomal PSA (UE-PSA) to predict the results of initial prostate biopsies and discriminate clinically significant prostate cancer (Gleason score ≥ 7, csPCa) from non-significant PCa (Gleason score < 7, nsPCa) plus benign patients. Two hundred seventy-two consecutive participants were admitted who underwent a prostate biopsy. The UE-PSA expression was detected by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA). The predictive power and clinical value of UE-PSA was assessed by receiver operating characteristic (ROC), decision curve analysis (DCA) and waterfall plots. UE-PSA was upregulated in PCa compared to benign patients (p < 0.001) and csPCa compared to nsPCa plus benign patients (p < 0.001). UE-PSA achieved an AUC of 0.953 (0.905 - 0.989) in distinguishing PCa from benign patients and an AUC of 0.879 (0.808-0.941) in predicting csPCa from nsPCa plus benign patients. These results were validated in an additional multi-center cohort. In addition, DCA showed that UE-PSA achieved the highest net benefit at almost any threshold probability compared to tPSA and %fPSA. As the waterfall plot showed, the UE-PSA assay could avoid 57.6% (155 cases) and 34.6% (93 cases) unnecessary biopsies while only missing 2.6% (7 cases) and 1.5% (4 cases) of the cases of csPCa at the cutoff value of 90% and 95% sensitivity, respectively. We validated that UE-PSA presented great diagnostic power and clinical utility to diagnose PCa and csPCa. UE-PSA could be a promising non-invasive biomarker to improve PCa detection. This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.