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Open AccessJournal Article

Quantitation of Prostate-specific Antigen in Serum by a Sensitive Enzyme Immunoassay

TLDR
Results indicate that PA is a histiotypic product of the prostate and may be of use as an adjunctive tool in diagnostic procedures of prostate cancer.
Abstract
A sensitive sandwich-type enzyme immunoassay has been developed for quantitation of a human prostate-specific antigen (PA). With this method, PA at a concentration as low as 0.10 ng/ml can be detected. The assay was reproducible as within and between assays yielded a coefficient of variation of 5.7% and 4.6%, respectively. Only human prostate tissues ( n = 31) were shown to contain PA. No PA was detected in other human normal or tumor tissues ( n = 13). PA was not detectable in sera from normal females ( n = 17) or female cancer patients ( n = 25). A mean ± S.D. of 0.47 ± 0.661 ng/ml (ranging from less than 0.10 to 2.6) was obtained from a group of 51 normal males. Sera from male patients with nonprostatic cancer contained a similar range of PA as that of normal males. Patients with prostate cancer (371 of 442) and benign prostatic hypertrophy (13 of 19) were shown to have elevated levels of circulating PA. Although no quantitative difference in PA levels was found between the benign prostatic hypertrophy group and Stage A of prostatic cancer, patients with Stages C and D prostatic cancer exhibited significantly elevated levels of PA qualitatively and quantitatively. These results therefore indicate that PA is a histiotypic product of the prostate and may be of use as an adjunctive tool in diagnostic procedures of prostate cancer.

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Prostate-Specific Antigen as a Serum Marker for Adenocarcinoma of the Prostate

TL;DR: PSA is more sensitive than PAP in the detection of prostatic cancer and will probably be more useful in monitoring responses and recurrence after therapy, however, since both PSA and PAP may be elevated in benign prostatic hyperplasia, neither marker is specific.
Journal ArticleDOI

Prostate specific antigen: a critical assessment of the most useful tumor marker for adenocarcinoma of the prostate.

TL;DR: It is unlikely that PSA by itself will become an effective screening tool for the early diagnosis of prostate cancer, but if combined with digital rectal examination and/or transrectal ultrasound it may become a vital part of any early detection program.
Journal ArticleDOI

Serum prostate specific antigen complexed to alpha 1-antichymotrypsin as an indicator of prostate cancer.

TL;DR: The combination of assays measuring total PSA immunoreactivity, the noncomplexed molecular form and PSA in complex with alpha 1-antichymotrypsin may facilitate discrimination between prostate cancer and BPH.
Journal ArticleDOI

Prostate Specific Antigen in the Preoperative and Postoperative Evaluation of Localized Prostatic Cancer Treated with Radical Prostatectomy

TL;DR: It is suggested that preoperative levels of prostate specific antigen are not sufficiently reliable to predict final pathological stage on an individual basis in patients with early prostatic cancer, and that the antigen is a sensitive tumor marker for the detection of residual disease after radical prostatectomy and subsequent recurrence of tumor on long-term followup.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Peroxidase-labeled antibody. A new method of conjugation

TL;DR: A new method of conjugating horseradish peroxidase with proteins was developed by oxidizing the carbohydrate moiety with sodium periodate and bound to free amino groups of proteins unidirectionally at high efficiencies.
Journal Article

A prostate antigen in sera of prostatic cancer patients.

TL;DR: Sera from 175 patients with nonprostatic cancers, including those with late-stage disease of the breast, lung, colon, rectum, stomach, and pancreas, were antigen negative as were 20 samples each from normal adults and age-matched males.
Journal Article

A Solid-Phase Fluorescent Immunoassay for Human Prostatic Acid Phosphatase

TL;DR: The sensitivity of this solid-phase immunofluorometric assay was more sensitive than other immunoassays for prostatic acid phosphatase, and the antibody could be reused after the prostatic Acid Phosphatase was dissociated from IgG-Sepharose 4B.
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