Pathological and molecular mechanisms of prostate carcinogenesis: Implications for diagnosis, detection, prevention, and treatment

Prostate cancer is an increasing threat throughout the world. As a result of a demographic shift in population, the number of men at risk for developing prostate cancer is growing rapidly. For 2002, an estimated 189,000 prostate cancer cases were diagnosed in the U.S., accompanied by an estimated 30...

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Published inJournal of cellular biochemistry Vol. 91; no. 3; pp. 459 - 477
Main Authors De Marzo, Angelo M., DeWeese, Theodore L., Platz, Elizabeth A., Meeker, Alan K., Nakayama, Masashi, Epstein, Jonathan I., Isaacs, William B., Nelson, William G.
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Hoboken Wiley Subscription Services, Inc., A Wiley Company 15.02.2004
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Summary:Prostate cancer is an increasing threat throughout the world. As a result of a demographic shift in population, the number of men at risk for developing prostate cancer is growing rapidly. For 2002, an estimated 189,000 prostate cancer cases were diagnosed in the U.S., accompanied by an estimated 30,200 prostate cancer deaths [Jemal et al., 2002]. Most prostate cancer is now diagnosed in men who were biopsied as a result of an elevated serum PSA (>4 ng/ml) level detected following routine screening. Autopsy studies [Breslow et al., 1977; Yatani et al., 1982; Sakr et al., 1993], and the recent results of the Prostate Cancer Prevention Trial (PCPT) [Thompson et al., 2003], a large scale clinical trial where all men entered the trial without an elevated PSA (<3 ng/ml) were subsequently biopsied, indicate the prevalence of histologic prostate cancer is much higher than anticipated by PSA screening. Environmental factors, such as diet and lifestyle, have long been recognized contributors to the development of prostate cancer. Recent studies of the molecular alterations in prostate cancer cells have begun to provide clues as to how prostate cancer may arise and progress. For example, while inflammation in the prostate has been suggested previously as a contributor to prostate cancer development [Gardner and Bennett, 1992; Platz, 1998; De Marzo et al., 1999; Nelson et al., 2003], research regarding the genetic and pathological aspects of prostate inflammation has only recently begun to receive attention. Here, we review the subject of inflammation and prostate cancer as part of a “chronic epithelial injury” hypothesis of prostate carcinogenesis, and the somatic genome and phenotypic changes characteristic of prostate cancer cells. We also present the implications of these changes for prostate cancer diagnosis, detection, prevention, and treatment. © 2003 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.
Bibliography:ArticleID:JCB10747
istex:C0C5ED9034AF15BA237E5DFB08F939C01FCDA962
NIH/NCI Specialized Program in Research Excellence (SPORE) in Prostate Cancer (Johns Hopkins) - No. P50CA58236
Public Health Services NIH/NCI - No. R01CA084997; No. R01CA70196
ark:/67375/WNG-D1DZ83Q9-4
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ISSN:0730-2312
1097-4644
DOI:10.1002/jcb.10747