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Dive into the research topics where Amabelle B. Cruz is active.

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Featured researches published by Amabelle B. Cruz.


The Journal of Urology | 2011

A multicenter study of [-2]pro-prostate specific antigen combined with prostate specific antigen and free prostate specific antigen for prostate cancer detection in the 2.0 to 10.0 ng/ml prostate specific antigen range

William J. Catalona; Alan W. Partin; Martin G. Sanda; John T. Wei; George G. Klee; Chris H. Bangma; Kevin M. Slawin; Leonard S. Marks; Stacy Loeb; Dennis L. Broyles; Sanghyuk S. Shin; Amabelle B. Cruz; Daniel W. Chan; Lori J. Sokoll; William L. Roberts; Ron H.N. van Schaik; Isaac A. Mizrahi

PURPOSE Prostate specific antigen and free prostate specific antigen have limited specificity to detect clinically significant, curable prostate cancer, leading to unnecessary biopsy, and detection and treatment of some indolent tumors. Specificity to detect clinically significant prostate cancer may be improved by [-2]pro-prostate specific antigen. We evaluated [-2]pro-prostate specific antigen, free prostate specific antigen and prostate specific antigen using the formula, ([-2]pro-prostate specific antigen/free prostate specific antigen × prostate specific antigen(1/2)) to enhance specificity to detect overall and high grade prostate cancer. MATERIALS AND METHODS We enrolled 892 men with no history of prostate cancer, normal rectal examination, prostate specific antigen 2 to 10 ng/ml and 6-core or greater prostate biopsy in a prospective multi-institutional trial. We examined the relationship of serum prostate specific antigen, free-to-total prostate specific antigen and the prostate health index with biopsy results. Primary end points were specificity and AUC using the prostate health index to detect overall and Gleason 7 or greater prostate cancer on biopsy compared with those of free-to-total prostate specific antigen. RESULTS In the 2 to 10 ng/ml prostate specific antigen range at 80% to 95% sensitivity the specificity and AUC (0.703) of the prostate health index exceeded those of prostate specific antigen and free-to-total prostate specific antigen. An increasing prostate health index was associated with a 4.7-fold increased risk of prostate cancer and a 1.61-fold increased risk of Gleason score greater than or equal to 4 + 3 = 7 disease on biopsy. The AUC of the index exceeded that of free-to-total prostate specific antigen (0.724 vs 0.670) to discriminate prostate cancer with Gleason 4 or greater + 3 from lower grade disease or negative biopsy. Prostate health index results were not associated with age and prostate volume. CONCLUSIONS The prostate health index may be useful in prostate cancer screening to decrease unnecessary biopsy in men 50 years old or older with prostate specific antigen 2 to 10 ng/ml and negative digital rectal examination with minimal loss in sensitivity.


The Journal of Urology | 2013

Prospective Multicenter Evaluation of the Beckman Coulter Prostate Health Index Using WHO Calibration

Stacy Loeb; Lori J. Sokoll; Dennis L. Broyles; Chris H. Bangma; Ron H.N. van Schaik; George G. Klee; John T. Wei; Martin G. Sanda; Alan W. Partin; Kevin M. Slawin; Leonard S. Marks; Isaac A. Mizrahi; Sanghyuk S. Shin; Amabelle B. Cruz; Daniel W. Chan; William L. Roberts; William J. Catalona

PURPOSE Reported prostate specific antigen values may differ substantially among assays using Hybritech® or WHO standardization. The Beckman Coulter® Prostate Health Index and [-2]proPSA are newly approved serum markers associated with prostate cancer risk and aggressiveness. We studied the influence of assay standardization on these markers. MATERIALS AND METHODS Prostate specific antigen, percent free prostate specific antigen and [-2]proPSA were measured using Hybritech calibration in 892 men from a prospective, multicenter study undergoing prostate biopsy. We calculated the Prostate Health Index using the equation, ([-2]proPSA/free prostate specific antigen) × PSA. Index performance characteristics for prostate cancer detection were then determined using recalculated WHO calibration prostate specific antigen values. RESULTS The median Prostate Health Index was significantly higher in men with prostate cancer than in those with negative biopsies using WHO values (47.4 vs 39.8, p <0.001). The index offered improved discrimination of prostate cancer detection on biopsy (AUC 0.704) compared to percent free or total prostate specific antigen using the WHO calibration. CONCLUSIONS The Prostate Health Index can be calculated using Hybritech or WHO standardized assays. It significantly improved prediction of the biopsy outcome over that of percent free or prostate specific antigen alone.


Clinical Biochemistry | 2016

Blood biomarkers of endocrine, immune, inflammatory, and metabolic systems in obstructive sleep apnea

Wesley Elon Fleming; Aliya S Ferouz-Colborn; Michael K. Samoszuk; Armaghan Azad; Jiuliu Lu; John S. Riley; Amabelle B. Cruz; Susann Podolak; Doni J. Clark; Kurtis R. Bray; Paula C. Southwick

OBJECTIVE/BACKGROUND Obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) is a common disorder, affecting over 100 million adults. Untreated OSA leads to serious health consequences and perturbations in endocrine, immune, inflammatory, and metabolic systems. Study objectives are to evaluate the association between OSA and biomarkers, and to test the hypothesis that a combination of markers may be useful in screening for OSA. PATIENTS/METHODS A multicenter trial was conducted enrolling symptomatic male patients with suspected OSA. All subjects underwent in-laboratory overnight polysomnography. A non-symptomatic control group was also obtained. Eleven biomarkers were tested: HbA1c, CRP, EPO, IL-6, uric acid, cortisol, hGH, prolactin, testosterone, DHEA (Beckman Coulter UniCel DxC 600i Synchron® Access® Clinical Systems), IGF-1. RESULTS 73 male subjects were enrolled; 26 had moderate/severe OSA. ROC curve analysis showed HbA1c, CRP, EPO, IL-6, and Uric Acid (AUCs: 0.76, 0.73, 0.65, 0.65, 0.61) were superior to the Epworth Sleepiness Scale (AUC: 0.52). Concurrent elevation of HbA1c and CRP provide even greater predictive power. A combination of elevated HbA1c, CRP, and EPO provided 0.08 increase in AUC (0.84 [0.75 - 0.94]) over individual markers (p<0.05), with high sensitivity (85%), and specificity (79%) for moderate/severe OSA. CONCLUSIONS OSA induces characteristic endocrine, immune, inflammatory, and metabolic disturbances that can be detected with blood biomarkers. These biomarkers are superior to standard screening questionnaires. Various clusters of these biomarkers have an even greater association with OSA and thus may represent physiologic signatures of the disorder that may have value in initial screening for OSA as well as for follow-up of therapy response.


Nature and Science of Sleep | 2018

Use of blood biomarkers to screen for obstructive sleep apnea

Wesley Fleming; Jon-Erik C Holty; Richard K. Bogan; Dennis Hwang; Aliya S Ferouz-Colborn; Rohit Budhiraja; Susan Redline; Edith Mensah-Osman; Nadir Ishag Osman; Qing Li; Armaghan Azad; Susann Podolak; Michael K. Samoszuk; Amabelle B. Cruz; Yang Bai; Jiuliu Lu; John S. Riley; Paula C. Southwick

Purpose Obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) is a highly prevalent disorder associated with increased risk for cardiovascular disease, diabetes, and other chronic conditions. Unfortunately, up to 90% of individuals with OSA remain without a diagnosis or therapy. We assess the relationship between OSA and blood biomarkers, and test the hypothesis that combinations of markers provide a characteristic OSA signature with diagnostic screening value. This validation study was conducted in an independent cohort in order to replicate findings from a prior feasibility study. Patients and methods This multicenter prospective study consecutively enrolled adult male subjects with clinically suspected OSA. All subjects underwent overnight sleep studies. An asymptomatic control group was also obtained. Five biomarkers were tested: glycated hemoglobin (HbA1c), C-reactive protein (CRP), uric acid, erythropoietin (EPO), and interleukin-6 (IL-6). Results The study enrolled 264 subjects. The combination of HbA1c+CRP+EPO (area under the curve 0.78) was superior to the Epworth Sleepiness Scale (ESS; 0.53) and STOP-Bang (0.70) questionnaires. In non-obese subjects, the combination of biomarkers (0.75) was superior to body mass index (BMI; 0.61). Sensitivity and specificity results, respectively, were: HbA1c+CRP+EPO (81% and 60%), ESS (78% and 19%), STOP-Bang (75% and 52%), BMI (81% and 56%), and BMI in non-obese patients (81% and 38%). Conclusion We verify our hypothesis and replicate our prior feasibility findings that OSA is associated with a characteristic signature cluster of biomarker changes in men. Concurrent elevations of HbA1c, CRP, and EPO levels should generate a high suspicion of OSA and may have utility as an OSA screening tool. Biomarker combinations correlate with OSA severity and, therefore, may assist sleep centers in identifying and triaging higher risk patients for sleep study diagnosis and treatment.


The Journal of Urology | 2015

The Prostate Health Index Selectively Identifies Clinically Significant Prostate Cancer

Stacy Loeb; Martin G. Sanda; Dennis L. Broyles; Sanghyuk S. Shin; Chris H. Bangma; John T. Wei; Alan W. Partin; George G. Klee; Kevin M. Slawin; Leonard S. Marks; Ron H.N. van Schaik; Daniel W. Chan; Lori J. Sokoll; Amabelle B. Cruz; Isaac A. Mizrahi; William J. Catalona


The Journal of Urology | 2010

1847 [-2]PROPSA IN COMBINATION WITH PSA AND FREE-PSA, USING THE BECKMAN COULTER ACCESS IMMUNOASSAY SYSTEMS IMPROVES PROSTATE CANCER DETECTION RELATIVE TO PSA AND FREE PSA. A MULTI-CENTER PROSPECTIVE CLINICAL STUDY

William J. Catalona; Martin G. Sanda; John T. Wei; George G. Klee; Kevin M. Slawin; Leondard S. Marks; Chris H. Bangma; Daniel W. Chan; Lori J. Sokoll; William L. Roberts; Ron H.N. van Schaik; Dennis L. Broyles; Amabelle B. Cruz; Isaac A. Mizrahi; Sanghyuk S. Shin; Alan W. Partin


Archive | 2016

Obstructive sleep apnea (osa) biomarker panel

Paula C. Southwick; Jiuliu Lu; John S. Riley; Michael K. Samoszuk; Amabelle B. Cruz


The Journal of Urology | 2013

2055 PROSTATE HEALTH INDEX (PHI) FOR REDUCING OVERDETECTION OF INDOLENT PROSTATE CANCER AND UNNECESSARY BIOPSY WHILE IMPROVING DETECTION OF AGGRESSIVE CANCERS

Martin G. Sanda; John T. Wei; Dennis L. Broyles; Sanhuk Shin; Alan W. Partin; George G. Klee; Chris H. Bangma; Kevin M. Slawin; Leonard S. Marks; Amabelle B. Cruz; Isaac A. Mizrahi; Dan Chan; Lori J. Sokoll; Ron H.N. van Schaik; Stacy Loeb; William J. Catalona


The Journal of Urology | 2011

A Multicenter Study of [-2]Pro-Prostate Specific Antigen Combined With Prostate Specific Antigen and

William J. Catalona; Alan W. Partin; Martin G. Sanda; John T. Wei; George G. Klee; Chris H. Bangma; Kevin M. Slawin; Leonard S. Marks; Stacy Loeb; Dennis L. Broyles; Sanghyuk S. Shin; Amabelle B. Cruz; Daniel W. Chan; Lori J. Sokoll; William L. Roberts; Ron H.N. van Schaik; Isaac A. Mizrahi


The Journal of Urology | 2011

982 EVALUATION OF THE PROSTATE HEALTH INDEX (PHI)1 IN THE 2 TO 4, AND 4 TO 10 NG/ML PSA RANGES: RESULTS FROM A MULTI-SITE, PROSPECTIVE, CLINICAL EVALUATION

William J. Catalona; Martin G. Sanda; John T. Wei; George G. Klee; Chris H. Bangma; Kevin M. Slawin; Leonard S. Marks; Stacy Loeb; Dennis L. Broyles; Sanghyuk S. Shin; Amabelle B. Cruz; Isaac A. Mizrahi; Daniel W. Chan; Lori J. Sokoll; William L. Roberts; Ron H.N. van Schaik; Alan W. Partin

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John T. Wei

University of Michigan

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Kevin M. Slawin

Baylor College of Medicine

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Alan W. Partin

Johns Hopkins University

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Lori J. Sokoll

Johns Hopkins University

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Chris H. Bangma

Erasmus University Rotterdam

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