Monday, October 14, 2013

Benign Prostatic Hyperplasia could be Adenocarcinoma Prostate



What is the Prostate?
The prostate is a walnut-sized organ that produces fluid and nutrients for sperm during ejaculation. The gland is located just under the bladder and in front of the rectum, the lower part of the bowel. The urethra, the narrow tube that spans the length of the penis and that carries both urine and semen out of the body, runs through the prostate. The glandular cells of the prostate normally function to produce a fluid that is released into the urethra during ejaculation. This fluid forms part of the seminal fluid, which nourishes the sperm. Secretions from the prostate increase the pH of the semen and help to neutralize the acidity of the female vagina.
The prostate is surrounded by blood and lymphatic vessels:

  • Blood vessels are part of the circulatory system. They supply oxygen and nutrients and remove waste from the cells of the prostate.
  • Lymphatic vessels are part of a large network termed the lymphatic system. These vessels collect and carry fluid and cells from the tissues of the body. Smaller lymphatic vessels merge with larger ones, as streams merge into a river. Large vessels empty into grape-like clusters of lymphatic tissue called lymph nodes. The lymphatic vessels of the prostate carry lymphatic fluid to a mass of lymph nodes located in the pelvic region.Prostate cancer is the uncontrolled growth of cells in the prostate gland, a gland found only in men. Although the prostate is made up of several cell types, almost all prostate cancers develop in the glandular cells. Cancer of gland cells is known as adenocarcinoma.
Prostate cancer symptoms usually start in the area of the gland that can be felt by a doctor during a DRE, thus leading to early prostate cancer diagnosis.
Most men will not experience any symptoms of prostate cancer if it is caught early. However, some men do, and these symptoms may include the following.
  • A need to urinate frequently, especially at night
  • Difficulty starting urination or holding back urine
  • Weak or interrupted flow of urine
  • Painful or burning urination
  • Difficulty in having an erection
  • Painful ejaculation
  • Blood in urine or semen
  • Frequent pain or stiffness in the lower back, hips, or upper thighs
Although most patients will have urinary symptoms related primarily to BPH, a workup for prostate cancer may be indicated by a DRE or an abnormal Prostate Specific Antigen (PSA) blood test.

Diagnosis of prostate cancer
A Pelvic ultrasound scan in males is used to view the bladder and prostate (An ultrasound examination, also commonly referred to as a sonogram). Amongst other conditions, ultrasound can detect enlargement of the prostate (benign prostatic hypertrophy) and tumours.
The bladder is an organ made of smooth muscle that stores urine until ready for release. The most common reason for bladder ultrasound is to assess bladder emptying by measuring residual urine after urination. Many conditions may result in disorders of bladder emptying and these include an enlarged prostate, urethral stricture or bladder dysfunction. Bladder ultrasound may also provide information about the bladder wall, the presence of diverticula of the bladder, the size of the prostate, the presence of stones or large tumors in the bladder.
Another common indication for ultrasound is obtaining the volume or size of the prostate for treatment planning purposes. 
Digital  rectal exam Digital rectal exams (DRE) are very useful for the detection of abnormalities, including cancer, in the rectum. A doctor inserts a gloved, lubricated finger in the rectum and feels for abnormalities. In men, digital rectal exams are also used to detect changes in prostate that could indicate an abnormal condition, including cancer. The procedure is very quick and although it may be uncomfortable, it is not painful.
An enlarged prostate means the gland has grown bigger. Prostate enlargement happens to almost all men as they get older. As the gland grows, it can press on the urethra and cause urination and bladder problems. An enlarged prostate is often called benign prostatic hyperplasia (BPH) or benign prostatic hypertrophy.
BPH involves hyperplasia (an increase in the number of cells) rather than hypertrophy (a growth in the size of individual cells), but the two terms are often used interchangeably, even amongst urologists
PSA test The prostate specific antigen is a glycoprotein produced by prostate cells and is a normal component of semen. When abnormal events occur in the prostate, such as prostate cancer, the overabundance of prostate cells, the overproduction of PSA, or the leaking of PSA into the bloodstream may result in a measurable increase in the level of PSA in the blood. Blood test are used to assess the level of PSA in the blood. A higher-than-normal level of PSA might indicate a problem with the prostate, including, but not limited to, cancer.
Normal PSA values In general, a PSA level less than 4 ng/ml is considered normal, and greater than 10 ng/ml is considered high. Levels between 4 and 10 ng/ml represent a grey area in which a doctor may consider a digital rectal exam before recommending further testing.
Interpretation of PSA test results The interpretation of PSA levels is not straightforward. Elevated PSA levels indicate something has caused more PSA than usual to enter the bloodstream from the prostate, but the test is not able to identify the cause of the elevation. Several factors can cause a rise in PSA levels, such as a prostate infection or benign enlargement of the prostate.(1) Many men with elevated PSA levels DO NOT have prostate cancer. Additionally, not all prostate cancers cause PSA levels to rise. These cancers would not be detected by the PSA test. Prostate cancer, unlike many other cancers, often grows slowly, and does not always pose a significant health risk. Some prostate cancers do grow quickly, but neither the PSA test nor any available test today can differentiate between slow and fast growing prostate cancers. While some people will benefit from having the PSA test, patients should discuss the benefits and limitations of this test with their health care provider before having it performed and when interpreting the results. (http://sciencedoing.blogspot.in/2013/08/prostate-specific-antigen-misnomer-and.html)
Normal ranges by age group commonly used include
  • Men below age 50: PSA less than 2.5
  • Men 50 - 59 years: PSA level less than 3.5
  • Men 60 - 69 years: PSA level less than 4.5
  • Men older than 70 years: PSA level less than 6.5
Increased levels of PSA may suggest the presence of prostate cancer. However, prostate cancer can also be present in the complete absence of an elevated PSA level, in which case the test result would be a false negative.PSA levels can be also increased by prostatitis, irritation, benign prostatic hyperplasia (BPH), and recent ejaculation, producing a false positive result. Digital rectal examination (DRE) has been shown in several studies to produce an increase in PSA. However, the effect is clinically insignificant, since DRE causes the most substantial increases in patients with PSA levels already elevated over 4.0 ng/mL.

Free PSA Most PSA in the blood is bound to serum proteins. A small amount is not protein bound and is called 'free PSA'. In men with prostate cancer the ratio of free (unbound) PSA to total PSA is decreased. The risk of cancer increases if the free to total ratio is less than 25%. (See graph at right.) The lower the ratio is, the greater the probability of prostate cancer. Measuring the ratio of free to total PSA appears to be particularly promising for eliminating unnecessary biopsies in men with PSA levels between 4 and 10 ng/mL. However, both total and free PSA increase immediately after ejaculation, returning slowly to baseline levels within 24 hours.
Biopsy Non invasive diagnostic techniques, like MRI, Ultrasound, CT or PET, are very useful but in some cases when a suspicious abnormality (lesion) is discovered a doctor may perform a biopsy to determine its exact characteristics. A biopsy is the removal of either a portion of a lesion (incisional) or the entire lesion (excisional).  The tissues is then sent to a lab where a pathologist will diagnose the sample. There are two categories of biopsies.
  • Fine Needle Aspiration (FNA):
    • Benign - the mass is not of much concern and will not cause any significant problems as long as it remains unchanged.
    • Atypically indeterminate - a diagnosis cannot be obtained from the sample. Other tests are needed to determine the nature of the lesion.
    • Suspicious/probably malignant - not a diagnosis of cancer. This type of diagnosis requires additional investigation because the sample has abnormal characteristics. This lesion should be biopsied with a more complete method to determine whether a malignancy (cancer) is present.
    • Malignant - a diagnosis of cancer; should be biopsied and tested for exact tumor makeup to prepare for treatment.
    • Unsatisfactory - a diagnosis cannot be determined from the sample because of insufficient sample size, processing or other machine or human errors.
  • Core Needle Biopsy (CNB): Because cancer cells are dividing in an abnormal fashion, they make the tissue around them appear disorganized. By examining collections of cells (tissue) instead of individual cells, pathologists get a good sense for the health of the organ from which the sample was removed. The study of tissues is called histology and the study of abnormal tissues is called histopathology.
Cytological examination (prostate secretion) The study of cells, their origin, structure, function, and pathology is called cytology. 
Cells are continually shed (exfoliated) from tissues that line the cavities and hollow organs of the body. These exfoliated cells may float in the fluid and mucous material bathes or passes through these cavities. These cells can be examined microscopically to determine their tissue of origin and whether or not they are malignant.
(As a further guide, histology is the study of tissues, while cytology is the study of cells.)
Histopathological examination Diagnosis of prostatic carcinoma requires a synthesis of a constellation of histological attributes that allows for a definitive diagnosis. A conceptual framework for a rationale approach to this diagnosis entails application of major and minor criteria:
  • Major criteria
    • - Architectural: infiltrative small glands or cribriform glands too large or irregular to represent high‐grade prostatic intraepithelial neoplasia (PIN)
    • - Single cell layer (absence of basal cells)
    • - Nuclear atypia: nuclear and nucleolar enlargement
  • Minor criteria
    • - Intraluminal wispy blue mucin (blue‐tinged mucinous secretions)
    • - Pink amorphous secretions
    • - Mitotic figures
    • - Intraluminal crystalloids
    • - Adjacent high‐grade PIN
    • - Amphophilic cytoplasm
    • - Nuclear hyperchromasia
Gleason score The pathologist assigns a Gleason score based on the sum of two numbers: the first number is the grade of the most common tumor pattern, the second number is the grade of the second most common pattern.
A pathologist examines the biopsy specimen and attempts to give a score to the two patterns.
  • First called the primary grade, represents the majority of tumor (has to be greater than 50% of the total pattern seen).
  • Second - a secondary grade - relates to the minority of the tumor (has to be less than 50%, but at least 5%, of the pattern of the total cancer observed).
If there are three patterns the first number is the most common and the second is the one with the highest grade. For example, if the most common tumor pattern was grade 3, but some cells were found to be grade 4, the Gleason Score would be 3+4 = 7. The Gleason Grade or Gleason Pattern ranges from 1 to 5, with 5 having the worst prognosis. The Gleason Score ranges from 2 to 10, with 10 having the worst prognosis. For Gleason Score 7, a Gleason 4+3 is a more aggressive cancer than a Gleason 3+4.
The scoring system is named after Donald Gleason, a pathologist at the Minneapolis Veterans Affairs Hospital who developed it; 'modified Gleason score' has higher performance than the original one, and is currently assumed standard in urological pathology.
Gleason patterns are associated with the following features:
  • Pattern 1 - The cancerous prostate closely resembles normal prostate tissue. The glands are small, well-formed, and closely packed.
  • Pattern 2 - The tissue still has well-formed glands, but they are larger and have more tissue between them.
  • Pattern 3 - The tissue still has recognizable glands, but the cells are darker. At high magnification, some of these cells have left the glands and are beginning to invade the surrounding tissue.
  • Pattern 4 - The tissue has few recognizable glands. Many cells are invading the surrounding tissue
  • Pattern 5 - The tissue does not have recognizable glands. There are often just sheets of cells throughout the surrounding tissue.

In present form of the Gleason system, prostate cancer of Gleason pattern 1 and 2 are almost never seen, and by definition are almost never seen on biopsy. Gleason pattern 3 is by far the most common. Thus a Gleason score 3+3=6 cancer is to be regarded as LOWEST grade seen in practice, and indeed these cancers usually have rather good prognoses.
Staging and grading of prostate cancer: After examination and biopsy, doctors will "stage" and "grade" prostate cancer with a system of letters and numbers.
Grade: Grade refers to the expected aggressiveness of the tumor based on the biopsy. The most common grading system is the Gleason system. Grades 1 and 2 are closer in appearance to normal glands, and are the slowest growing, better behaving tumors. Grades 4 and 5 have more variations in size of tumor cells and loss of glandular appearance, and are the more aggressive tumors.


Stage: The clinical stage of a cancer is the extent of disease, whether it is localized, spread regionally, or spread more widely to lymph nodes or bones.
A system of staging used by the National Cancer Institute and most doctors is called TNM Staging (clinical and pathological). This stands for:
  • Tumor size - how big the tumor is and has it spread in the area
  • Lymph Nodes - are any lymph nodes positive for cancer and how many
  • Metastasis - has the cancer spread to any other parts of the body
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some related blog post


Prostate Cancer Risk Factors
The risk of developing prostate cancer can be linked to age, race/ethnicity, and family history of the disease.

How to Reduce the Risk of Prostate Cancer
Lycopene and antioxidants found in tomatoes and other pink and red foods may reduce prostate cancer risks. Men should consume a diet that includes a variety of fruits and vegetables. Because these foods tend to be lower in calories, choosing these foods instead of those higher in calories may also to less obesity.
Antioxidant and lycopene rich food supplement is beneficial, as from latest research findings
# 2013-08-24, WASHINGTON, Aug. 23 (Xinhua) -- U.S. researchers said Friday that a greater consumption of fruits and vegetables may reduce the risk of developing invasive bladder cancer in women.
Researchers from the University of Hawaii wrote in the Journal of Nutrition that they analyzed data collected from 185,885 older adults over a period of 12.5 years. Overall, 152 women and 429 men were diagnosed with invasive bladder cancer.
After adjusting for variables related to cancer risk, such as age, the researchers found that women who consumed the most fruits and vegetables had the lowest bladder risk.
The researchers said women consuming the most yellow-orange vegetables were 52 percent less likely to have bladder cancer than women consuming the least yellow-orange vegetables.
The study also suggested that women with the highest intake of vitamins A, C and E had the lowest risk of bladder cancer.
There were, however, no associations between fruit and vegetable intake and invasive bladder cancer in men, it said.
"Our study supports the fruit and vegetable recommendation for cancer prevention," researcher Song-Yi Park at the University of Hawaii Cancer Center said in a statement.
"However, further investigation is needed to understand and explain why the reduced cancer risk with higher consumption of fruits and vegetables was confined to only women," Park added.


* Genetics:
Recently, a mutation in a gene called HOXB13 has been linked to early onset prostate cancer that runs in families. This mutation is rare, though, found in less than 2% of the men with prostate cancer that were studied.
The HOXB13 gene and most of the genes that have been studied so far are from chromosomes that are inherited from both parents. Some research has found that a certain variant of mitochondrial DNA, which is inherited only from a person's mother, might double or even triple a man's risk of developing prostate cancer.
One of the biggest problems now facing men with prostate cancer and their doctors is figuring out which cancers are likely to stay within the gland and which are more likely to grow and spread (and definitely need treatment). New discoveries may help with this in the near future. For example, the product of a gene known as EZH2 seems to appear more often in advanced prostate cancers than in those at an early stage. Researchers are now trying to decide whether the presence of this gene product, or others, indicates that a cancer is more aggressive. This could eventually help tell which men need treatment and which might be better served by active surveillance.

* a new diagnostic tool :
# checking for the presence of the protein Engrailed-2 (EN2) in the urine. Homeobox protein engrailed-2 is a protein that in humans is encoded by the EN2 gene. A method for diagnosing prostate cancer by detection of EN2 in urine has developed. The results of a clinical trial of 288 men suggest that EN2 could be a marker for prostate cancer which might prove more reliable than current methods that use prostate-specific antigen (PSA). If effective, a urine test is considered easier and less embarrassing for the patient than blood tests or rectal examinations


# thankfully consulted and referred from:
http://www.webmd.com/urinary-incontinence-oab/picture-of-the-prostate
http://www.cancer.org/cancer/prostatecancer/detailedguide/prostate-cancer-new-research
http://www.cancerquest.org
https://winshipcancer.emory.edu
http://training.seer.cancer.gov
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1860598/
http://www.cancer.gov/dictionary?cdrid=45696
http://en.wikipedia.org
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/EN2_%28gene%29
http://news.xinhuanet.com/english/health/2013-08/24/c_132658367.htm




1 comment:

  1. Benign Prostatic Hyperplasiashares symptoms with Adenocarcinoma Prostate, emphasizing the importance of proper diagnosis to distinguish between non-cancerous and cancerous conditions for appropriate treatment.

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