Pretreatment PSA levels affects the completion rate of Ra-223 treatment

Abstract The aim of this study was to review our initial experience of using radium 223 (Ra-223) for metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer (CRPC) and to evaluate whether pretreatment PSA levels correlate with completion of Ra-223 treatment. In addition, we examined change ratios of PSA, AL...

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Main Authors: Nobuko Utsumi, Hiromasa Kurosaki, Kosei Miura, Hiroki Kitoh, Koichiro Akakura
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Nature Publishing Group 2021-03-01
Series:Scientific Reports
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-021-86033-4
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spelling doaj-b21b6bec7d8547c9b0bee33a89f127462021-03-21T12:38:18ZengNature Publishing GroupScientific Reports2045-23222021-03-011111610.1038/s41598-021-86033-4Pretreatment PSA levels affects the completion rate of Ra-223 treatmentNobuko Utsumi0Hiromasa Kurosaki1Kosei Miura2Hiroki Kitoh3Koichiro Akakura4Department of Radiation Therapy, Japan Community Healthcare Organization Tokyo Shinjuku Medical CenterDepartment of Radiation Therapy, Japan Community Healthcare Organization Tokyo Shinjuku Medical CenterDepartment of Radiation Therapy, Japan Community Healthcare Organization Tokyo Shinjuku Medical CenterDepartment of Urology, Japan Community Healthcare Organization Tokyo Shinjuku Medical CenterDepartment of Urology, Japan Community Healthcare Organization Tokyo Shinjuku Medical CenterAbstract The aim of this study was to review our initial experience of using radium 223 (Ra-223) for metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer (CRPC) and to evaluate whether pretreatment PSA levels correlate with completion of Ra-223 treatment. In addition, we examined change ratios of PSA, ALP and BAP after the third administration to evaluate the correlation of these change ratios with completion of the subsequent Ra-223 treatment. Forty patients were enrolled in this retrospective study. Ra-223 treatment was considered completed in patients who received five or six administrations. Patient backgrounds and changes in biomarkers were compared between patient groups (complete vs. incomplete Ra-223 treatment). PSA levels before treatment were significantly lower in the complete compared with the incomplete group (cutoff value; 21.7). ALP and BAP levels had decreased after the third administration in the complete group, compared with baseline levels, while levels in the incomplete group had increased. Significant difference was seen in ALP levels, while was not seen in BAP levels between the two groups. Ra-223 treatment should be considered for CRPC with low PSA levels. Changes in PSA and ALP during Ra-223 treatment might provide markers to identify patients likely to complete Ra-223 treatment, with implications for prognosis.https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-021-86033-4
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Nobuko Utsumi
Hiromasa Kurosaki
Kosei Miura
Hiroki Kitoh
Koichiro Akakura
spellingShingle Nobuko Utsumi
Hiromasa Kurosaki
Kosei Miura
Hiroki Kitoh
Koichiro Akakura
Pretreatment PSA levels affects the completion rate of Ra-223 treatment
Scientific Reports
author_facet Nobuko Utsumi
Hiromasa Kurosaki
Kosei Miura
Hiroki Kitoh
Koichiro Akakura
author_sort Nobuko Utsumi
title Pretreatment PSA levels affects the completion rate of Ra-223 treatment
title_short Pretreatment PSA levels affects the completion rate of Ra-223 treatment
title_full Pretreatment PSA levels affects the completion rate of Ra-223 treatment
title_fullStr Pretreatment PSA levels affects the completion rate of Ra-223 treatment
title_full_unstemmed Pretreatment PSA levels affects the completion rate of Ra-223 treatment
title_sort pretreatment psa levels affects the completion rate of ra-223 treatment
publisher Nature Publishing Group
series Scientific Reports
issn 2045-2322
publishDate 2021-03-01
description Abstract The aim of this study was to review our initial experience of using radium 223 (Ra-223) for metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer (CRPC) and to evaluate whether pretreatment PSA levels correlate with completion of Ra-223 treatment. In addition, we examined change ratios of PSA, ALP and BAP after the third administration to evaluate the correlation of these change ratios with completion of the subsequent Ra-223 treatment. Forty patients were enrolled in this retrospective study. Ra-223 treatment was considered completed in patients who received five or six administrations. Patient backgrounds and changes in biomarkers were compared between patient groups (complete vs. incomplete Ra-223 treatment). PSA levels before treatment were significantly lower in the complete compared with the incomplete group (cutoff value; 21.7). ALP and BAP levels had decreased after the third administration in the complete group, compared with baseline levels, while levels in the incomplete group had increased. Significant difference was seen in ALP levels, while was not seen in BAP levels between the two groups. Ra-223 treatment should be considered for CRPC with low PSA levels. Changes in PSA and ALP during Ra-223 treatment might provide markers to identify patients likely to complete Ra-223 treatment, with implications for prognosis.
url https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-021-86033-4
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