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New cPSA Test Being Used by Some to Screen for Prostate Cancer

October 4, 2002
A new form of the prostate-specific antigen (PSA) test is now available to screen for prostate cancer, the second leading cause of cancer death among men in this country. Called complexed PSA or cPSA, the test measures the level of PSA that has been complexed or bound with alpha-1-antichymotrypsin in a patient's blood sample.

Some organizations are touting cPSA as a more accurate form of PSA blood testing for the detection of early stage prostate cancer. The Prostate Cancer Education Council, which sponsors Prostate Cancer Awareness Week, decided to offer the cPSA test during this year's screening events in hopes of evaluating its performance compared to standard PSA tests.

PSA exists in three major forms in the blood: 1) free, 2) bound to a protein called alpha-1-antichymotrypsin, and 3) bound to another protein called alpha-2 macroglobulin. People with prostate cancer have more of the form bound to alpha-1-antichymotrypsin and less of the free form than do healthy men or those with benign diseases of the prostate.

Initial screening for prostate cancer commonly uses the total PSA test, which measures all but the third form of PSA. If the result is slightly elevated, follow-up testing is often performed using another test that measures free PSA. These tests have been criticized by some as being associated with too many false positives and false negatives. It was hoped that the new cPSA test would replace these so that only a single screening test would be needed.

In one large, multi-center study that included researchers from Johns Hopkins and the New York University School of Medicine, the cPSA test demonstrated improved specificity over a total PSA assay, reducing the number of false positives and leading the investigators to conclude that cPSA could be used as a first-line test for prostate cancer screening. However, in several studies published this year, the advantage of cPSA over total and free PSA tests was less convincing. In one trial at the University of Texas M.D. Anderson Cancer Center, the cPSA assay was found to only be equivalent to a total PSA test for early detection. In another study of 535 patients conducted by McGill University, the ratio of free-to-total PSA performed better than either cPSA or total PSA alone in prostate cancer detection.

Until this issue becomes clearer through additional studies, it is important to understand that a cPSA test is available but also that there are advantages as well as drawbacks to each of the various approaches to PSA testing, including cPSA tests. Men should discuss all of their PSA test results with their doctor.

Related Pages
On this Site

Elsewhere On The Web
WBAL News: New Prostate Tests Means Earlier Detection ? Earlier Detection Means Early Treatment
Prostate Cancer Education Council: Complexed Prostate Specific Antigen (cPSA) Assay Fact Sheet
Hitt, Emma. "AUA: Complexed PSA Test Shows Improved Specificity over Total PSA." Doctor?s Guide to Medical & Other News. May 28, 2002.

Other Sources
Prostate Cancer Education Council. "2002 ?Prostate Cancer Awareness Week? to Offer a New Test for Cancer Screening." Press release.

Okihara K, et al. "Comparative analysis of complexed prostate specific antigen, free prostate specific antigen and their ratio in detecting prostate cancer." J Urol 2002 May; 167(5):2017-23.

Tanguay S, et al. "Comparative evaluation of total PSA, free/total PSA, and complexed PSA in prostate cancer detection." Urology 2002 Feb; 59(2):261-5.



This article last reviewed on October 4, 2002.
 
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