| 10 Décembre 2013
The association between inflammation and prostate  cancer is controversial. Some studies suggest that anti-inflammatory  therapies reduce prostate cancer risk while others have found that  prostate inflammation is linked with a lower risk of cancer. To  investigate the issue, Daniel Moreira, MD, of the North Shore-Long  Island Jewish Health System in New Hyde Park, NY, and his colleagues  analyzed information regarding 6,238 men aged 50 to 75 years who had  prostate-specific antigen (PSA) levels between 2.5 to 10ng/mL and who  had a prior negative biopsy (indicating the absence of prostate cancer).  Patients also underwent additional biopsies two and four years later. Acute  inflammation in biopsies taken at the start of the study was most  common in men of younger ages who had lower PSA levels and smaller  prostates, while chronic inflammation was associated with older age and  larger glands. At the 2-year biopsy, prostate cancer prevalence occurred  in 900 participants (14 percent). Both acute and chronic inflammation  was significantly associated with lower prostate cancer risk (a 25  percent reduced risk with acute inflammation and a 35 percent reduced  risk with chronic inflammation). At the 4-year biopsy, only acute  inflammation was associated with a lower prostate cancer risk. “Given  its predictive value, inflammation—and its type and severity—should be  routinely reported in prostate biopsies,” said Dr. Moreira. “Also, it is  possible that patients with inflammation at baseline biopsy may be  followed differently compared with patients without inflammation at  baseline biopsy given their risk of subsequent cancer detection is  lower.” The  authors noted that inflammation can arise as part of an immune response  that occurs when the body recognizes malignant cells as foreign agents,  thereby eliminating them before they can become an established tumor.  This might help explain why inflammation was linked with lower risk of  prostate cancer in their study. If this hypothesis is true, the findings  suggest that monitoring and modulating inflammation and the immune  response may help in the prevention and treatment of prostate cancer.
Signs  of inflammation in a man’s prostate biopsy may indicate he has a  reduced risk of subsequently being diagnosed with prostate cancer in a  future biopsy. That’s the conclusion of a new study published early  online in CANCER, a peer-reviewed journal of the American Cancer  Society. The study’s investigators say that because of its predictive  value, inflammation should be routinely reported in prostate biopsies.