A Prospective Study of Chronic Inflammation in Benign Prostate Tissue and Risk of Prostate Cancer: Linked PCPT and SELECT Cohorts

作者:Platz Elizabeth A*; Kulac Ibrahim; Barber John R; Drake Charles G; Joshu Corinne E; Nelson William G; Lucia M Scott; Klein Eric A; Lippman Scott M; Parnes Howard L; Thompson Ian M; Goodman Phyllis J; Tangen Catherine M; De Marzo Angelo M*
来源:Cancer Epidemiology Biomarkers & Prevention, 2017, 26(10): 1549-1557.
DOI:10.1158/1055-9965.EPI-17-0503

摘要

Background: We leveraged two trials to test the hypothesis of an inflammation-prostate cancer link prospectively in men without indication for biopsy. Methods: Prostate Cancer Prevention Trial (PCPT) participants who had an end-of-study biopsy performed per protocol that was negative for cancer and who subsequently enrolled in the Selenium and Vitamin E Cancer Prevention Trial (SELECT) were eligible. We selected all 100 cases and sampled 200 frequency-matched controls and used PCPT end-of-study biopsies as "baseline." Five men with PSA > 4 ng/mL at end-of-study biopsy were excluded. Tissue was located for 92 cases and 193 controls. We visually assessed inflammation in benign tissue. We estimated ORs and 95% confidence intervals (CI) using logistic regression adjusting for age and race. Results: Mean time between biopsy and diagnosis was 5.9 years. In men previously in the PCPT placebo arm, 78.1% of cases (N = 41) and 68.2% of controls (N = 85) had at least one baseline biopsy core (similar to 5 evaluated per man) with inflammation. The odds of prostate cancer (N = 41 cases) appeared to increase with increasing mean percentage of tissue area with inflammation, a trend that was statistically significant for Gleason sum < 4+3 disease (N = 31 cases; vs. 0%, > 0-< 1.8% OR = 1.70, 1.8< 5.0% OR = 2.39, >= 5% OR = 3.31, P-trend = 0.047). In men previously in the finasteride arm, prevalence of inflammation did not differ between cases (76.5%; N = 51) and controls (75.0%; N = 108). Conclusions: Benign tissue inflammation was positively associated with prostate cancer. Impact: This first prospective study of men without biopsy indication supports the hypothesis that inflammation influences prostate cancer development.

  • 出版日期2017-10
  • 单位NIH