Non-DRE Voided Urine Test to Diagnose Prostate Cancer: Updated Results
Patrick T. Gomella, Joon Yau Leong, Leonard G. Gomella, Vivek S. Tomar, Hector Teran, Edouard J. Trabulsi, Madhukar L. Thakur

TL;DR
This study introduces a noninvasive urine test for prostate cancer by detecting malignant cells in voided urine using a new optical technique.
Contribution
A novel non-DRE voided urine optical assay is proposed for detecting prostate cancer by targeting VPAC receptors on malignant cells.
Findings
Malignant cells shed in non-DRE voided urine correlate with prostate cancer severity and Gleason grade.
The assay showed 89.6% specificity and 100% NPV in distinguishing prostate cancer from BPH.
Fluorescent intensity and percentage of malignant cells increased with higher Gleason grades.
Abstract
Background: The standard diagnostic approach for prostate cancer (PCa) diagnosis consists of serum prostate-specific antigen (PSA) testing, digital rectal examination (DRE) and image-guided targeted biopsies. Given the invasive nature, potential adverse events and costs associated with these techniques, alternative approaches have been investigated, specifically with serum and urine assays. The work presented here is intended to further validate a novel noninvasive optical technique for PCa detection, targeting the VPAC genomic receptors that are overexpressed on prostate cancer’s malignant cells (MC), in non-DRE voided urine. Methods: Patients (N = 62) who had image-guided biopsy and histologically confirmed localized PCa, and who were scheduled for radical prostatectomy, provided a non-DRE voided urine sample prior to surgery. Urine was cytocentrifuged and cells fixed on a glass…
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Taxonomy
TopicsProstate Cancer Diagnosis and Treatment · Prostate Cancer Treatment and Research · Hormonal and reproductive studies
