Racial differences in prostate-specific antigen levels in patients with local-regional prostate cancer.

1992 
Prostate cancer is a significant health problem for blacks. The incidence and mortality rates are higher in blacks than in whites; blacks often present with a higher stage. Prostate-specific antigen (PSA) is a very useful serum marker in prostate cancer. We analyzed data from a cohort of 161 patients to determine whether there were any racial differences in PSA levels prior to treatment in local-regional prostate cancer. The immunoradiometric method was used to determine the PSA values. The mean PSA levels were significantly higher in blacks than in whites (P = 0.022), and the difference remained significant in multivariate analysis after adjusting for stage and grade (P = 0.020). However, when analyzed further, the difference was statistically significant in one hospital (P = 0.001) and not in another (P = 0.493). Thus, our results are not unequivocal, but our data do suggest that racial differences in PSA levels not accounted for by tumor stage or grade may exist. Assuming that the data truly reflect a racial difference, the cause(s) of this difference remains to be determined. It may exist because, within each clinical stage, blacks are presenting with a higher tumor cell burden, or it may be indicative of more aggressive biological behavior. The possibility that racial differences are due to socioeconomic factors was considered by estimating median income level from zip code of residence; although a correlation between socioeconomic status and PSA level was found, racial differences remained borderline significant (P = 0.055) after adjusting for income level (in addition to stage and grade).
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