Predictive Value of Hormonal Evaluation Before Prostate Needle Biopsy on Prostate Cancer T Stage and Prognosis
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Original Article
P: 9-13
March 2018

Predictive Value of Hormonal Evaluation Before Prostate Needle Biopsy on Prostate Cancer T Stage and Prognosis

Bull Urooncol 2018;17(1):9-13
1. University of Health Sciences, Bozyaka Training and Research Hospital, Clinic of Urology, İzmir, Turkey
2. Dokuz Eylül University, Institute of Oncology, Department of Basic Oncology, İzmir, Turkey
3. Dokuz Eylül University Faculty of Medicine, Department of Urology, İzmir, Turkey
4. Dokuz Eylül University Faculty of Medicine, Department of Patology, İzmir, Turkey
No information available.
No information available
Received Date: 27.11.2017
Accepted Date: 18.12.2017
Publish Date: 30.03.2018
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ABSTRACT

Conclusion:

We demonstrated a correlation between locally invasive PCa and low TTE measured before PNB and low TTE density. In particular, TTE values <300 ng/dL were associated with high pathologic T stage, GS, and lymph node positivity.

Results:

A total of 81 patients were evaluated. The mean follow-up time was 37.7 months. Mean recurrence free survival (RFS) among all patients was 94.2±7 months. In multivariate analysis of the preoperative data, TTE/prostate volume (p=0.015) and PNB tumor percentage (p=0.004) were significantly higher in group 2 (n=32) compared to group 1 (n=49). In the postoperative data, RRP pathology Gleason score (GS) (p=0.015) and tumor volume (p=0.02) were significantly higher in group 2. RFS was 99.2±5.8 months in group 1 and 77±12.1 months in group 2 (p=0.02). When patients were assessed according to TTE levels, of the pre- and postoperative data only RRP pathology T stage, GS, and lymph node positivity were significantly higher in the TTE <300 ng/dL group (n=30) compared to the TTE >300 ng/dL group (n=51). The biochemical recurrence rates and RFS times (87.7±13.8 months and 91.3±6.4 months, respectively) were similar between the groups (p=0.571).

Materials and Methods:

Patients were evaluated in two groups according to RRP pathologic T stage: T2 (group 1) and T3 (group 2). Then patients were assessed in two groups based on total testosterone (TTE) values: >300 ng/dL and <300 ng/dL. The preoperative data, hormone data, RRP pathologic data, and biochemical recurrence and RFS results were compared between these groups.

Objective:

In this study we evaluated the hormone data before prostate needle biopsy (PNB) in patients who underwent retropubic radical prostatectomy (RRP) due to prostate adenocarcinoma (PCa). Correlations between the patients’ RRP pathology results, recurrence-free survival (RFS), and hormone data were investigated.

Introduction

Several preoperative factors have been investigated and risk classifications have been defined in order to predict locally invasive disease and gain insight about the prognosis of prostate adenocarcinoma (PCa). The most important of these is the D’Amico risk classification, which includes prostate-specific antigen (PSA), prostate needle biopsy (PNB), Gleason score (GS), and clinical stage (1,2,3). However, some argue that this classification is inadequate. Of the other parameters studied, findings of perineural invasion (PNI), number of positive biopsy cores, and tumor percentage in PNB are also important (4,5). Numerous studies have investigated the association between locally advanced disease and pre-treatment levels of free testosterone (fTE), estradiol (EST), follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH), luteinizing hormone (LH), and especially total testosterone (TTE) (4,6,7,8,9,10).

Therefore, in this study we evaluated patients who underwent retropubic radical prostatectomy (RRP) in our clinic due to PCa and had pre-PNB hormone data. We investigated the relationship between the patients’ hormone data and their RRP pathology results and survival outcomes.

Materials and Methods

Patients who underwent RRP in our clinic between 2005 and 2015 and had complete PNB and RRP pathology records were retrospectively screened. Of these, patients whose records included pre-PNB hormone tests were included in the study. The patients were evaluated in terms of age, PSA, free PSA, PSA density (PSAd), PNB pathology results (GS, number of positive biopsy cores, tumor percentage, and PNI positivity), prostate volume (PV), clinical stage, RRP pathology results (pathologic T stage, GS, tertiary Gleason pattern, tumor volume, surgical margin positivity, and lymph node positivity), biochemical recurrence rates, and recurrence-free survival time. Analysis of hormone data included TTE, fTE, LH, FSH, and EST values. PSAd (PSA/PV), fPSA/PSA, TTE/PV, fTE/TTE, TTE/LH, FSH/LH, TTE/FSH, and TTE/EST ratios were calculated from the available data.

Patients were evaluated in two groups based on RRP pathology T stage. Group 1 comprised patients with pathological T2 PCa and group 2 comprised those with pathological T3 PCa. Group 2 was further subdivided into pathological T3a (pT3a) and pathological T3b (pT3b) for separate analysis. All data were compared between group 1 and group 2. In a second analysis, patients were divided into two groups based on TTE value (>300 ng/dL and <300 ng/dL). The groups were compared in terms of preoperative data, hormone data, RRP pathology results, biochemical recurrence, and survival rates.

Statistical Analysis

The Mann-Whitney U test and Pearson’s c2 test were used both for comparisons between groups 1 and 2 and between the TTE <300 ng/dL and <300 ng/dL groups. Significant parameters were then used in multivariate binary logistic regression analysis. Recurrence-free survival times were assessed using the Kaplan-Meier survival analysis. The Statistical Package for the Social Sciences (SPSS version 20.0; SPSS, Chicago, IL, USA) was used for statistical analyses. The data are expressed as mean and standard deviation and statistical analysis is based on median values. Values with a p value of <0.05 were considered significant.

Results

Of the 381 patients whose PNB and RRP pathology results were screened, 81 with available hormone test results were retrospectively evaluated. Their mean age was 62.8 (48-76.5) years and the mean follow-up period was 37.7 months. Forty-nine of the patients were in group 1 and 32 were in group 2. In group 2, 24 patients were pT3a, 8 were pT3b. Biochemical recurrence was detected in a total of 13 patients. Patient data from groups 1 and 2 are shown in Table 1. Preoperatively, group 2 had higher age, PSA, PNB GS, PNI positivity, number of positive biopsy cores, and tumor percentage values, and lower TTE level and TTE/PV ratio compared to group 1 (p<0.05). In the postoperative data, group 2 also showed higher values for RRP pathology GS, tertiary Gleason pattern, tumor volume, surgical margin positivity, lymph node positivity, and biochemical recurrence rates (p<0.05). In multivariate analysis of the preoperative data, only TTE/PV (p=0.015) and PNB tumor percentage (p=0.004) were significantly higher in group 2. Postoperatively, only the RRP pathology GS (p=0.015) and tumor volume (p=0.02) were significantly higher in group 2. The mean recurrence-free survival time among all patients was 94.2±7 months. By group, recurrence-free survival time was 99.2±5.8 months in group 1 and 77±12.1 months in group 2 (p=0.02).

Table 1

In the second analysis, patient data were compared between the TTE >300 ng/dL and <300 ng/dL groups. Data distributions and the results of statistical analyses are presented in Tables 2 and 3. There were 30 patients in the TTE <300 ng/dL group and 51 patients in the TTE >300 ng/dL group. There were no significant differences between the groups other than preoperative TTE level (Table 2). In the postoperative data, RRP pathology T stage, GS, and lymph node positivity were higher in the TTE <300 ng/dL group (Table 3). Biochemical recurrence rates and recurrence-free survival time were similar between the groups. In the multivariate analysis, postoperative RRP pathology T stage and GS were lower in the TTE <300 ng/dL group, but the difference was not statistically significant (p=0.054 and p=0.052, respectively). Recurrence-free survival time was 87.7±13.8 months in the TTE <300 ng/dL group and 91.3±6.4 months in the TTE >300 ng/dL group (p=0.571).

Table 2
Table 3

Discussion

Although the link between TTE level and PCa has been recognized since Huggins et al.’s (11) 1941 study, it has recently gained a different dimension. Several recent studies have supported a negative correlation between low TTE level and PCa (12,13,14). One hypothesis regarding the pathophysiology of this relation suggests that the tumor reduces TTE level by causing inhibition of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis (15,16). In addition, it has been reported that TTE levels normalize in these patients after RRP. However, another hypothesis is that low TTE level causes a mutation in the development of PCa cells and leads to the development of cancer cells that are androgen-insensitive and more aggressive (17). In light of these possible mechanisms, the relationship between PCa and TTE is worthy of further elucidation. In a related study we conducted recently, we evaluated patients with similar PSA, clinical stage, and PNB GS data within the D’Amico risk groups. In that study, we found that TTE levels decreased as risk group increased (TTE levels were 368 ng/dL, 311 ng/dL, and 221.5 ng/dL in low-risk, moderate-risk, and high-risk PCa, respectively; p=0.033) (10). Low TTE level has been associated with high T stage and GS after RRP, especially in studies assessing the low-risk group (18,19).

When patients were evaluated according to pathological T stage, the mean TTE value was found to be 4.33 ng/mL in T2 patients and 3.44 ng/mL in T3 patients (20). Many studies have used a TTE threshold value of 3 ng/mL (300 ng/dL), and patients with TTE <3 ng/mL were shown to have higher RRP pathology GS and higher rate of T3 cancer (21). In another study, the pre-PNB TTE levels of 681 patients were investigated and low TTE (<300 ng/dL) level was associated with high-risk PCa (22). In the present study, TTE and especially TTE/PV (TTE density) were lower in patients with pathological T3 PCa (p<0.05). Similar to previous studies, when the TTE threshold was defined as 300 ng/dL, there was significantly higher RRP T stage, GS, and lymph node positivity in the 30 patients with TTE <300 ng/dL compared to the 51 patients with TTE >300 ng/dL, while biochemical recurrence rates and recurrence-free survival times were similar between the groups. In a study conducted in China, it was reported that a TTE value of <300 ng/dL is nonprognostic, while a value of <250 ng/dL is associated with high GS (23). This finding also demonstrates that the prognostic value of TTE may vary according to race. Considering the published studies overall, it can be said that a low pre-treatment TTE level is associated with a high post-treatment GS and pathological T stage.

In studies of other hormones, FSH levels in a study including 96 patients were 11.57 IU/L and 23.67 IU/L in T2 and T3 patients, respectively, and FSH elevation in T3 patients was found to be significant (8). In another study, it was reported that low TTE correlated with high FSH and that both were associated with high-grade tumors (24). A study assessing EST level reported no significant correlation between EST and locally advanced PCa (25). However, our previous EST analysis in a locally advanced PCa (T3a and T3b) group revealed significant correlation between EST and T3b disease (9). It has been shown that LH level is not a significant factor in the prognosis of PCa (9). In the present study, we found that hormonal parameters other than TTE, especially FSH and EST levels, were not associated with pathological T stage. However, considering the results obtained in other studies, further research focusing on locally invasive PCa is warranted.

Study Limitations

The main limitations of our study are the retrospective data collection and low number of patients. Another important limitation is that since fTE, EST, LH, and FSH data were not available in all cases, the statistical analyses did not encompass all the patients and was conducted only among patients with available data (the number of patients whose records included these data and their distribution between the groups are presented in the tables). Nevertheless, we believe that the value of the available data and the similar patient numbers in the groups are important for the study.

Conclusion

We showed in this study that low TTE and low TTE density detected in pre-PNB hormone tests are associated with post-RRP locally invasive PCa. In particular, TTE value <30 ng/dL was associated with higher pathological T stage, GS, and lymph node positivity, but low TTE level did not have an effect on biochemical recurrence or recurrence-free survival. Prospective cohort studies with large patient numbers are needed to clarify TTE results and the effects of FSH and EST levels on PCa.

Ethics

Ethics Committee Approval: Retrospective study.

Informed Consent: Retrospective study.

Peer-review: Externally peer-reviewed.

Authorship Contributions

Surgical and Medical Practices: S.Ç., O.B., Ö.D., G.A., Concept: S.Ç., Design: S.Ç., O.B., Data Collection or Processing: S.Ç., H.A.Y., B.T., K.Y., Analysis or Interpretation: S.Ç., O.B., Ö.D., K.Y., G.A., Literature Search: S.Ç., O.B., H.A.Y., Writing: S.Ç.

Conflict of Interest: No conflict of interest was declared by the authors.

Financial Disclosure: The authors declared that this study received no financial support.