Objective: In order to evaluate the negative predictive value of a low prostate-specific antigen (PSA) for a positive bone scan, we performed a retrospective study in a patient material from the Umea region in Northern Sweden. We also evaluated whether different tumour grades could influence this predictive value.
Material And Methods: Four-hundred-and-forty-six patients of newly diagnosed prostate cancer were reviewed. We analysed different levels of PSA, tumour grade, tumour stage and combinations of these parameters for their use in making a positive bone scintigraphy (BS) prediction.
Results: Among 214 patients with PSA <20 ng/ml, 9 showed a positive BS. When tumours of grades 2 and 3 were excluded, the number of positive BS predictions decreased to 6. For 350 of these 446 patients, a classification according to TNM was available; 162 of these 350 had a PSA value <20 ng/ml, and when this group comprised only small and well-differentiated tumours (T1-2, G1), only one of the remaining 81 patients had a positive BS result.
Conclusions: We conclude that in most patients with small and well-differentiated tumours (T1-2, G1) and PSA <20, BS staging need not be carried out.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/003655999750016041 | DOI Listing |
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