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LMTK2 as Potential Biomarker for Stratification between Clinically Insignificant and Clinically Significant Prostate Cancer

A set of prostate tumors tend to grow slowly and do not require active treatment. Therefore, stratification between patients with clinically significant and clinically insignificant prostate cancer (PC) remains a vital issue to avoid overtreatment. Fast development of genetic technologies accelerate...

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Autores principales: Vezelis, Alvydas, Simiene, Julija, Dabkeviciene, Daiva, Kincius, Marius, Ulys, Albertas, Suziedelis, Kestutis, Jarmalaite, Sonata, Jankevicius, Feliksas
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Hindawi 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7803409/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33488712
http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2021/8820366
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author Vezelis, Alvydas
Simiene, Julija
Dabkeviciene, Daiva
Kincius, Marius
Ulys, Albertas
Suziedelis, Kestutis
Jarmalaite, Sonata
Jankevicius, Feliksas
author_facet Vezelis, Alvydas
Simiene, Julija
Dabkeviciene, Daiva
Kincius, Marius
Ulys, Albertas
Suziedelis, Kestutis
Jarmalaite, Sonata
Jankevicius, Feliksas
author_sort Vezelis, Alvydas
collection PubMed
description A set of prostate tumors tend to grow slowly and do not require active treatment. Therefore, stratification between patients with clinically significant and clinically insignificant prostate cancer (PC) remains a vital issue to avoid overtreatment. Fast development of genetic technologies accelerated development of next-generation molecular tools for reliable PC diagnosis. The aim of this study is to evaluate the diagnostic value of molecular biomarkers (CRISP3, LMTK2, and MSMB) for separation of PC cases from benign prostatic changes and more specifically for identification of clinically significant PC from all pool of PC cases in patients with rising PSA levels. Patients (n = 200) who had rising PSA (PSA II) after negative transrectal systematic prostate biopsy due to elevated PSA (PSA I) were eligible to the study. In addition to PSA concentration, PSA density was calculated for each patient. Gene expression level was measured in peripheral blood samples of cases applying RT-PCR, while MSMB (−57 C/T) polymorphism was identified by pyrosequencing. LMTK2 and MSMB significantly differentiated control group from both BPD and PC groups. MSMB expression tended to increase from the major alleles of the CC genotype to the minor alleles of the TT genotype. PSA density was the only clinical characteristic that significantly differentiated clinically significant PC from clinically insignificant PC. Therefore, LMTK2 expression and PSA density were significantly distinguished between clinically significant PC and clinically insignificant PC. PSA density rather than PSA can differentiate PC from the benign prostate disease and, in combination with LMTK2, assist in stratification between clinically insignificant and clinically significant PC.
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spelling pubmed-78034092021-01-22 LMTK2 as Potential Biomarker for Stratification between Clinically Insignificant and Clinically Significant Prostate Cancer Vezelis, Alvydas Simiene, Julija Dabkeviciene, Daiva Kincius, Marius Ulys, Albertas Suziedelis, Kestutis Jarmalaite, Sonata Jankevicius, Feliksas J Oncol Research Article A set of prostate tumors tend to grow slowly and do not require active treatment. Therefore, stratification between patients with clinically significant and clinically insignificant prostate cancer (PC) remains a vital issue to avoid overtreatment. Fast development of genetic technologies accelerated development of next-generation molecular tools for reliable PC diagnosis. The aim of this study is to evaluate the diagnostic value of molecular biomarkers (CRISP3, LMTK2, and MSMB) for separation of PC cases from benign prostatic changes and more specifically for identification of clinically significant PC from all pool of PC cases in patients with rising PSA levels. Patients (n = 200) who had rising PSA (PSA II) after negative transrectal systematic prostate biopsy due to elevated PSA (PSA I) were eligible to the study. In addition to PSA concentration, PSA density was calculated for each patient. Gene expression level was measured in peripheral blood samples of cases applying RT-PCR, while MSMB (−57 C/T) polymorphism was identified by pyrosequencing. LMTK2 and MSMB significantly differentiated control group from both BPD and PC groups. MSMB expression tended to increase from the major alleles of the CC genotype to the minor alleles of the TT genotype. PSA density was the only clinical characteristic that significantly differentiated clinically significant PC from clinically insignificant PC. Therefore, LMTK2 expression and PSA density were significantly distinguished between clinically significant PC and clinically insignificant PC. PSA density rather than PSA can differentiate PC from the benign prostate disease and, in combination with LMTK2, assist in stratification between clinically insignificant and clinically significant PC. Hindawi 2021-01-05 /pmc/articles/PMC7803409/ /pubmed/33488712 http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2021/8820366 Text en Copyright © 2021 Alvydas Vezelis et al. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Vezelis, Alvydas
Simiene, Julija
Dabkeviciene, Daiva
Kincius, Marius
Ulys, Albertas
Suziedelis, Kestutis
Jarmalaite, Sonata
Jankevicius, Feliksas
LMTK2 as Potential Biomarker for Stratification between Clinically Insignificant and Clinically Significant Prostate Cancer
title LMTK2 as Potential Biomarker for Stratification between Clinically Insignificant and Clinically Significant Prostate Cancer
title_full LMTK2 as Potential Biomarker for Stratification between Clinically Insignificant and Clinically Significant Prostate Cancer
title_fullStr LMTK2 as Potential Biomarker for Stratification between Clinically Insignificant and Clinically Significant Prostate Cancer
title_full_unstemmed LMTK2 as Potential Biomarker for Stratification between Clinically Insignificant and Clinically Significant Prostate Cancer
title_short LMTK2 as Potential Biomarker for Stratification between Clinically Insignificant and Clinically Significant Prostate Cancer
title_sort lmtk2 as potential biomarker for stratification between clinically insignificant and clinically significant prostate cancer
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7803409/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33488712
http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2021/8820366
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