Prostate cancer diagnostics has been essentially changed within the last 5 years. While prostate-specific antigen (PSA) remains the basic parameter, the additional value of the two 2012 FDA-approved biomarkers prostate health index (PHI) in serum and prostate cancer gene 3 (PCA3) in urine has been confirmed numerous times [1]. The detection of TMPRSS2-ERG gene fusions in the tissue of approximately 50% of all prostate cancer patients and the subsequently developed urinary assay [2] put hope on further diagnostic improvement that could unfortunately only be partially fulfilled [3–5].
The senior author of this article [6] in this issue of Clinical Chemistry and Laboratory Medicine played the key role in detecting PCA3 and developing urinary assays for PCA3 and TMPRSS2-ERG [7]. And this group is now the first that compared both markers in whole urine, urinary sediment and exosomes. With this new independent study, the authors completed and partly relativized previous data when they compared only the profile of these markers in urinary sediments and exosomes [8]. This comparative approach between various urine fractions can be considered as exemplary for testing other biomarkers not only for prostate cancer but also for renal cell carcinoma and bladder cancer. The positive effect of a digital rectal examination (DRE) of the prostate before urine sampling for diagnostic purpose was confirmed regarding the diagnostic validity of these markers in detecting prostate cancer. However, the main result was that whole urine results in a higher analytical sensitivity compared to sensitivity obtained using sediments and exosomes. In this respect, the advantage to use whole urine samples as applied in the tests for PCA3 and TMPRSS2-ERG instead sediments is not only justified from the practical point of view but also with regard to the improved analytical sensitivity. On the other hand, biomarker levels measured in the three tested urine fractions in this study and presented in table 4 proved that there was a distinct difference between the levels in the whole urine and the sum of the two other fractions [6]. Thus, it can be concluded that a great amount of these mRNAs in the urine obviously occurs in free forms without any association to particles (exosomes) and without cellular confinement (sediments). It is particularly worth mentioning that this comprehensively researched study by Hendriks et al. clears away the erroneous view that nucleic acids in urine as in this case of PCA3 mRNA and TMPRSS2-ERG mRNA are mostly detected in the released prostate cells. In consequence, the analytical focus on sediments as done in several studies does not let expect satisfying results. A similar phenomenon of differences between samples of whole urine, cell-depleted urine, and sediments was also observed in bladder cancer patients for various mRNAs [9]. In addition, the differences in that study were not uniform for all tested mRNAs but showed a particular behavior for specific mRNAs [9]. Thus, the focus on possible new urinary markers including non-coding nucleic acids like microRNAs, long non-coding RNAs, and piRNAs should draw attention to this aspect. These observations imply that whole urine analysis as starting point should be used before the markers are tested regarding their diagnostic usefulness in the different urine fractions. Even more, each new marker can be reliably assesed if measured in all urinary fractions.
Urine as a complex substrate with several fractions is not easy to handle and processing and mRNA or miRNA extraction depends on many factors including stability. Regarding sample stability and storage, whole urine further can be surely preferred since different commercially available procedures have been recommended. These technical devices, e.g. supplied by Norgen Biotek Corp., Thorold, Canada with its various kits for urine RNA concentration, preservation, and isolation facilitate the applicability of these nucleic acid-based markers in urine in practice despite reliable long-term storage data are missing so far.
However, from the analytical aspect it is easier to handle serum. (-2)proPSA and the formula (-2)proPSA/freePSA × √PSA, which is named prostate health index (PHI) shows a better correlation with tumor aggressiveness than PCA3 [1]. Despite a clear clinical usefulness of PCA3 [10] its limitations are the relative complicated measurement procedure and the low sensitivity at high values of >100 [11]. However, the combination of PCA3 and TMPRSS2-ERG scores within several PSA-based models improved the predicting of PCa and high-grade PCa [5]. But it should be noted that the PCA3 and TMPRSS2-ERG-based Michigan-Prostate Score (MiPS) has costs of ~750 $. While this test improves prostate biopsy indication it cannot replace the biopsy itself. Here a multiparametric magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and in cases of suspicious lesions by using the Prostate Imaging Reporting and Data System (PI-RADS) a subsequent MRI/ultrasound fusion biopsy is done [12]. A clinical aggressive and significant PCa will be almost always detected by MRI with a detection rate of up to 87% in summarized data of >1900 patients [12]. However, in case of a non-suspicious PI-RADS score ~27% of mostly Gleason 3+3=6 cancers are overlooked as they are exclusively detected in the additional systematic biopsies after MRI/ultrasound fusion biopsy [13]. However, despite this shift in PCa diagnostics towards PI-RADS score based MRI and MRI/ultrasound fusion biopsies in patients with or even without prior biopsy we propose a significant role for biomarkers in serum and urine. For example, a young man with a gray zone PSA of 2–10 μg/L and non-suspicious MRI may still suffer from a Gleason 3+3=6 PCa and the presence of high values of PHI, PCA3 or MiPS may help to force a subsequent systematic biopsy. Thus, the time of prostate biomarkers is not over but it should be used in combination with the MRI in an appropriate strategy. So far, there is only one study that compared MRI, PHI and PCA3 with an advantage for the MRI but no PIRADS score was used [14]. Further comparisons of the established and new biomarkers with the MRI are necessary to find the best possible PCa diagnostic pathway of the future.
Author contributions: All the authors have accepted responsibility for the entire content of this submitted manuscript and approved submission.
Research funding: None declared.
Employment or leadership: None declared.
Honorarium: None declared.
Competing interests: The funding organization(s) played no role in the study design; in the collection, analysis, and interpretation of data; in the writing of the report; or in the decision to submit the report for publication.
References
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©2016 by De Gruyter
Articles in the same Issue
- Frontmatter
- Editorial
- The way of prostate cancer diagnostics
- Review
- Statistical methods used in the calculation of geriatric reference intervals: a systematic review
- Opinion Paper
- The side effects of translational omics: overtesting, overdiagnosis, overtreatment
- Genetics and Molecular Diagnostics
- Rapid detection of non-deletional mutations causing α-thalassemia by multicolor melting curve analysis
- General Clinical Chemistry and Laboratory Medicine
- Patient pools and the use of “patient means” are valuable tools in quality control illustrated by a bone-specific alkaline phosphatase assay
- Long-term stability of glucose: 96-h study using Terumo Glycaemia tubes
- Glucose is stable during prolonged storage in un-centrifuged Greiner tubes with liquid citrate buffer, but not in serum and NaF/KOx tubes
- Croatian laboratories have a good knowledge of the proper detection and management of hemolyzed, icteric and lipemic samples
- Fetal exposure to ethanol: relationship between ethyl glucuronide in maternal hair during pregnancy and ethyl glucuronide in neonatal meconium
- Comparing the effect of isotopically labeled or structural analog internal standards on the performance of a LC-MS/MS method to determine ciclosporin A, everolimus, sirolimus and tacrolimus in whole blood
- Relationship between matrix metalloproteinase-9 and oxidative stress in drug-free male schizophrenia: a case control study
- Comparison of functional fibrinogen (FF/CFF) and FIBTEM in surgical patients – a retrospective study
- Reference Values and Biological Variations
- Assessment of serum free light chain levels in healthy adults immediately after marathon running
- Pharmacokinetics of a novel dosing regimen of oral melatonin in critically ill patients
- Cancer Diagnostics
- An epidemiology-based model as a tool to monitor the outbreak of inappropriateness in tumor marker requests: a national scale study
- Comparative analysis of prostate cancer specific biomarkers PCA3 and ERG in whole urine, urinary sediments and exosomes
- Infectious Diseases
- Comparative evaluation of the Aptima HIV-1 Quant Dx assay and COBAS TaqMan HIV-1 v2.0 assay using the Roche High Pure System for the quantification of HIV-1 RNA in plasma
- Evaluating the use of procalcitonin in an asymptomatic, HIV-infected antiretroviral therapy-naïve, South African cohort
- Diabetes
- Early prediction of gestational diabetes: a practical model combining clinical and biochemical markers
- Letters to the Editors
- Highly-trained dogs’ olfactory system for detecting biochemical recurrence following radical prostatectomy
- More on the accuracy of the Architect enzymatic assay for hemoglobin A1c and its traceability to the IFCC reference system
- Assessing quality from an accuracy-based HbA1c proficiency survey
- HbG-Honolulu interferes with some cation-exchange HPLC HbA1c assays
- Between analyser differences in chloride measurements and thus anion gap cause different interpretations of the acid-base balance
- Non-albumininuric proteinuria: a urinary tubular marker in the diagnosis of diabetic kidney disease
- International Normalized Ratio (INR) testing: analytical and clinical performance of four point-of-care devices versus central laboratory instrumentation analysis
- Genetic screening of the makorin ring finger 3 gene in girls with idiopathic central precocious puberty
- Practical approach for medical validation of therapeutic drug monitoring results
- Marked elevation of procalcitonin in a patient with a drug related infusion reaction to rituximab
Articles in the same Issue
- Frontmatter
- Editorial
- The way of prostate cancer diagnostics
- Review
- Statistical methods used in the calculation of geriatric reference intervals: a systematic review
- Opinion Paper
- The side effects of translational omics: overtesting, overdiagnosis, overtreatment
- Genetics and Molecular Diagnostics
- Rapid detection of non-deletional mutations causing α-thalassemia by multicolor melting curve analysis
- General Clinical Chemistry and Laboratory Medicine
- Patient pools and the use of “patient means” are valuable tools in quality control illustrated by a bone-specific alkaline phosphatase assay
- Long-term stability of glucose: 96-h study using Terumo Glycaemia tubes
- Glucose is stable during prolonged storage in un-centrifuged Greiner tubes with liquid citrate buffer, but not in serum and NaF/KOx tubes
- Croatian laboratories have a good knowledge of the proper detection and management of hemolyzed, icteric and lipemic samples
- Fetal exposure to ethanol: relationship between ethyl glucuronide in maternal hair during pregnancy and ethyl glucuronide in neonatal meconium
- Comparing the effect of isotopically labeled or structural analog internal standards on the performance of a LC-MS/MS method to determine ciclosporin A, everolimus, sirolimus and tacrolimus in whole blood
- Relationship between matrix metalloproteinase-9 and oxidative stress in drug-free male schizophrenia: a case control study
- Comparison of functional fibrinogen (FF/CFF) and FIBTEM in surgical patients – a retrospective study
- Reference Values and Biological Variations
- Assessment of serum free light chain levels in healthy adults immediately after marathon running
- Pharmacokinetics of a novel dosing regimen of oral melatonin in critically ill patients
- Cancer Diagnostics
- An epidemiology-based model as a tool to monitor the outbreak of inappropriateness in tumor marker requests: a national scale study
- Comparative analysis of prostate cancer specific biomarkers PCA3 and ERG in whole urine, urinary sediments and exosomes
- Infectious Diseases
- Comparative evaluation of the Aptima HIV-1 Quant Dx assay and COBAS TaqMan HIV-1 v2.0 assay using the Roche High Pure System for the quantification of HIV-1 RNA in plasma
- Evaluating the use of procalcitonin in an asymptomatic, HIV-infected antiretroviral therapy-naïve, South African cohort
- Diabetes
- Early prediction of gestational diabetes: a practical model combining clinical and biochemical markers
- Letters to the Editors
- Highly-trained dogs’ olfactory system for detecting biochemical recurrence following radical prostatectomy
- More on the accuracy of the Architect enzymatic assay for hemoglobin A1c and its traceability to the IFCC reference system
- Assessing quality from an accuracy-based HbA1c proficiency survey
- HbG-Honolulu interferes with some cation-exchange HPLC HbA1c assays
- Between analyser differences in chloride measurements and thus anion gap cause different interpretations of the acid-base balance
- Non-albumininuric proteinuria: a urinary tubular marker in the diagnosis of diabetic kidney disease
- International Normalized Ratio (INR) testing: analytical and clinical performance of four point-of-care devices versus central laboratory instrumentation analysis
- Genetic screening of the makorin ring finger 3 gene in girls with idiopathic central precocious puberty
- Practical approach for medical validation of therapeutic drug monitoring results
- Marked elevation of procalcitonin in a patient with a drug related infusion reaction to rituximab