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Background: Testing for prostate-specific antigen (PSA) is often recommended for men with a potential risk of prostate cancer (PCa) before requiring advanced examination. However, the best PSA cutoff value remains controversial.
Object: We compared the predictive performance of age-specific percentile-based PSA thresholds with a conventional cutoff of >4 ng/mL for the risk of PCa.
Methods: We included men who received PSA measurements between 2003 and 2017 in a medical center in Taiwan. Logistic regression modeling was used to assess the association between age-specific percentile-based PSA thresholds and PCa risk in age subgroups. We further applied C-statistic and decision curve analysis to compare the predictive performance of age-specific percentile-based PSA with that of a conventional cutoff PSA.
Results: We identified 626 patients with PCa and 40 836 patients without PCa. The slope of PSA in patients >60-year-old was almost 3 times that of those <60-year-old (0.713 vs 0.259). The risk effect sizes of the 75th percentile PSA cutoff (<60-year-old: 2.19; 60-70-year-old: 4.36; >70-year-old: 5.84 ng/mL) were comparable to those observed based on the conventional cutoff in all age groups. However, the discrimination performance of the 75th percentile PSA cutoff was better than that of the conventional cutoff among patients aged <60-year-old (C-statistic, 0.783 vs. 0.729, < 0.05). The 75th percentile cutoffs also correctly identified an additional 2 patients with PCa for every 100 patients with PSA screening at the threshold probability of 20%.
Conclusions: Our data support the use of the 75th percentile PSA cutoff to facilitate individualized risk assessment, particularly for patients aged <60-year-old.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.37796/2211-8039.1415 | DOI Listing |
Front Pediatr
August 2025
Department of Pediatrics, Wenling Maternal and Child Health Care Hospital, Wenling, Zhejiang, China.
Introduction: Adenoid hypertrophy (AH) is prevalent in 35%-70% of the global pediatric population, leading to airway obstruction and sleep disturbances. Current diagnostic criteria for the adenoid-to-nasopharyngeal (/) ratio lack age-specific adjustments, potentially resulting in diagnostic inaccuracies.
Methods: This retrospective study assessed pediatric outpatients aged 1-12 years who underwent lateral nasopharyngeal radiography.
J Pak Med Assoc
July 2025
District Headquarters Hospital, Okara, Pakistan.
Objectives: To determine age- and gender-specific normative values for physical fitness among school-going children.
Methods: The cross-sectional, analytical study was conducted from September 2021 to May 2022 in Alipur, Pakistan, and comprised school-going children of either gender aged 10-17 years. Physical fitness was assessed using the Assessing Levels of Physical Activity health-related fitness test battery, morphological component, waist circumference, hand grip strength measurement of right and left hands, 4x10m shuttle run test for motor fitness assessment and 20min shuttle test for cardiorespiratory fitness assessment.
Biomedicine (Taipei)
September 2023
Big Data Center, China Medical University Hospital, Taichung, Taiwan.
Background: Testing for prostate-specific antigen (PSA) is often recommended for men with a potential risk of prostate cancer (PCa) before requiring advanced examination. However, the best PSA cutoff value remains controversial.
Object: We compared the predictive performance of age-specific percentile-based PSA thresholds with a conventional cutoff of >4 ng/mL for the risk of PCa.
Pediatr Obes
March 2022
Menzies Institute for Medical Research, University of Tasmania, Hobart, Australia.
Background: No studies have assessed the association between change in weight status and subclinical cardiovascular outcomes in children.
Objective: To examine the association of change in weight status over 2 years with carotid intima-media thickness (cIMT) among Chinese children.
Methods: A total of 1184 children aged 6-11 years at baseline with complete data were included, and there were 1073 children after excluding those with cIMT ≥ sex- and age-specific 90th percentile values at baseline.
Background: Considering the physiological changes in serum procalcitonin (PCT) levels in newborns due to age, we recently established an age-specific percentile-based reference curve for serum PCT level. The present study aimed to determine the best cutoff percentile line using this reference curve for the differentiation between infected and colonized preterm infants.
Methods: A total of 52 preterm infants with positive bacterial culture (9 with bacterial infection, 43 with colonization) were enrolled within the study period.