[PSA interest and prostatitis: literature review].

Prog Urol

Service d'urologie, CHRU Bretonneau, 2, boulevard Tonnellé, 37044 Tours, France; Université François-Rabelais PRES centre Val de Loire, 37044 Tours, France. Electronic address:

Published: December 2013

Unlabelled: Prostatitis is easily diagnosed but sometimes associated with PSA measurement. An increased PSA in an asymptomatic patient may be associated with antibiotic use to eliminate the inflammatory part and to confirm prostate biopsy. It seems interesting to confirm or infirm these attitudes with a systematic review of the literature

Method: We performed a literature review using the words [prostatitis], [acute prostatitis], [prostate specific antigen], [PSA], in the MEDLINE, Pubmed and AMBASE database searching for articles in French or English published in the past 20 years.

Results: PSA is not always increased during an acute prostatitis episode. An increased PSA in an asymptomatic man does not seem to be systematically correlated to prostate inflammation. Analyzing the studies, it seems inaccurate to measure PSA value during a febrile urinary infection episode in men. Systematic use of antibiotic to decrease PSA and not performing prostate biopsy is not relevant and may induce resistance to antibiotic and doesn't induce a reduction risk of having prostate biopsy.

Conclusion: PSA is unnecessary in case of febrile urinary tract infection in men.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.purol.2013.05.009DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

increased psa
8
psa asymptomatic
8
prostate biopsy
8
febrile urinary
8
psa
7
[psa interest
4
interest prostatitis
4
prostatitis literature
4
literature review]
4
review] unlabelled
4

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!