By Duke Medicine News and Communications
DURHAM, N.C. -- Men who are overweight or obese have lower
concentrations of prostate-specific antigen (PSA) in their
blood than their normal-weight counterparts, according to a new
study led by Duke University Medical Center researchers.
The finding echoes earlier results on PSA concentrations
found in obese and overweight men with prostate cancer and
highlights the need to reconsider PSA threshold values for
heavier patients, and to encourage those patients to get
serious about losing weight.
"A study released last year from our group showed that obese
and overweight men with prostate cancer had deceptively low PSA
scores compared to normal-weight men with prostate cancer, but
we now have extended our findings to show that this trend holds
true in the general screening population," said Marva Price,
R.N., a family nurse practitioner and researcher in Duke's
School of Nursing, the Duke Comprehensive Cancer Center and the
Duke Prostate Center.
"We found that mildly obese men's PSA scores were fourteen
percent lower than normal-weight men, and moderately and
severely obese men had 29 percent lower PSA values," Price
said.
Doctors have proposed that overweight and obese men have
lower PSA scores because their bodies have a greater volume of
blood. Larger blood volumes dilute the amount of PSA in the
bloodstream, making the concentration of PSA -- which is what
is measured to screen for prostate cancer -- lower.
The latest results appear online in the Feb. 9, 2008 issue
of the journal Urology. The study was funded by the United
States Department of Defense.
PSA is considered the gold standard for detecting prostate
cancer; it is a protein released into the blood by the prostate
gland, and is elevated in the presence of cancer.
For this study, researchers looked at PSA scores among 535
men who took part in a free prostate cancer screening program.
Seventy-three percent of the group was overweight or obese.
"The prevalence of obesity in the United States has doubled
in the past 15 years," Price said. "Our study demonstrates yet
another health danger that obesity poses. One in three
Americans is obese, and a man who is 5'11" and weighs 215
pounds is considered obese."
The best advice clinicians can give their patients is to
adopt healthier lifestyles, said Stephen Freedland, M.D., a
urologist at Duke and the study's senior author. "We tell
patients to exercise three or four times a week, eat a
healthier diet, high in vegetables and fruits, and keep getting
screened," he said. However, to compensate for the lower PSA
values, Freedland also recommends lowering the PSA threshold
that is considered abnormal for obese men. "If we don't do
that, we may be missing cancers in obese men, which could lead
to delayed diagnosis and poorer outcomes."
Other Duke contributors to this study include Robert
Hamilton, Cary Robertson, and Maureen Butts.