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Title: [The digital rectal exam, prostate-specific antigen and transrectal echography in the diagnosis of prostatic cancer]. Author: Martínez de Hurtado J, Chéchile Toniolo G, Villavicencio Mavrich H. Journal: Arch Esp Urol; 1995 Apr; 48(3):247-59. PubMed ID: 7538749. Abstract: OBJECTIVES: This study analyzes the three available clinical methods in the diagnosis of prostate cancer (PC): digital rectal examination (DRE), serum prostate specific antigen (PSA) and transrectal ultrasound (TRUS), and attempts to establish the best system in the early detection of PC. METHODS: The findings of DRE, serum PSA and TRUS of the prostate in patients in which a TRUS-guided prostate biopsy was performed initially, and prostate surgery afterwards (TURP in 72%, radical retropubic prostatectomy in 20% and simple prostatectomy in 8%), are retrospectively analyzed. RESULTS: PC was eventually found in 50 patients (56%). Seventy-eight patients had an abnormal DRE, 44 of which had a final diagnosis of PC (sensitivity = 94%, specificity = 20.5%). Serum PSA levels were available in 60 cases before diagnosis. Levels > 4 ng/ml were found in 32 of 38 cases with PC (sensitivity = 84%, specificity = 31%). The TRUS finding with the highest positive predictive value (PPV) for PC was diffuse prostate heterogeneity (77.8%). When a hypoechoic nodule was seen in the prostate peripheral zone, PC was found in 53.7%. Different combinations of the three methods are analyzed, trying to increase the diagnostic capabilities of each isolated test. Transrectal ultrasound-guided prostate biopsy detected 44 (88%) of the 50 cases with PC, its negative predictive value being 86.7%. Prostate tissue valid for histologic diagnosis was obtained in 97% of the cases, and the predictive value of the true tumor grade was 84.1%. The general complication rate attained 3.4%, none being of the septic type. CONCLUSIONS: When parallel testing was examined (one or more tests being abnormal), the most efficient combination in the early detection of PC was when DRE was suspicious or serum PSA > 4 ng/ml (sensitivity = 95%, PPV = 62%). When at least two diagnostic tests were abnormal (serial testing), the most efficient combination to confirm the presence of this tumor was an abnormal TRUS and a serum PSA > 10 ng/ml (specificity = 86%, PPV = 88%).[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]