Literature DB >> 11410889

Clinical staging of prostate cancer: reproducibility and clarification of issues.

T Campbell1, J Blasko, E D Crawford, J Forman, G Hanks, D Kuban, J Montie, J Moul, A Pollack, D Raghavan, P Ray, M Roach, G Steinberg, N Stone, I Thompson, N Vogelzang, S Vijayakumar.   

Abstract

The American Joint Committee on Cancer (AJCC) staging system for prostate cancer adopted in 1992 is based on tumor-node-metastasis (TNM) designations. It has been widely accepted for use in local and advanced disease. The purpose of this study was to assess reproducibility of staging among observers and to help clarify staging issues. Twelve prostate cancer cases were sent to 20 physicians with special expertise in prostate cancer including eight urologists, eight radiation oncologists, and four medical oncologists. Physicians were asked to assign a stage based on the 1992 AJCC clinical staging. The most frequently reported stage assigned to each case was taken to be the consensus. Agreement was the percentage of physicians who reported that particular stage. Seventy-five percent of the physicians responded. The overall agreement for assignment of T stage was 63.9%. Differences were found by specialty for inclusion of available information in designating a T stage. The overall agreement for N stage was 73.8%. The most common designation was Nx regardless of availability of a computed tomography scan. The overall agreement for M stage was 76.6%. Without a bone scan the most common designation was Mx regardless of Gleason grade or prostate-specific antigen (PSA). A frequent comment was that PSA was more indicative of disease extent than current clinical staging. The reproducibility of the 1992 clinical AJCC staging is poor even among experts in the field. This problem arises primarily from disagreement regarding which studies are included in assigning a stage. Some of these difficulties are addressed in the 1997 revision. However, the clinical staging does not address the true biological significance of disease in many instances. Copyright 2001 Wiley-Liss, Inc.

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Year:  2001        PMID: 11410889     DOI: 10.1002/ijc.1017

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Int J Cancer        ISSN: 0020-7136            Impact factor:   7.396


  4 in total

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Journal:  Brain Behav Immun       Date:  2012-09-26       Impact factor: 7.217

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Journal:  Cancers (Basel)       Date:  2022-01-22       Impact factor: 6.639

3.  Does laterality of positive needle biopsy in clinical T2a patients with prostate cancer affect biochemical recurrence-free survival?

Authors:  Ina Wu; Matthew E Nielsen; Misop Han; Alan W Partin; Danil V Makarov
Journal:  Urology       Date:  2008-04-18       Impact factor: 2.649

4.  Supervised classification by filter methods and recursive feature elimination predicts risk of radiotherapy-related fatigue in patients with prostate cancer.

Authors:  Leorey N Saligan; Juan Luis Fernández-Martínez; Enrique J deAndrés-Galiana; Stephen Sonis
Journal:  Cancer Inform       Date:  2014-12-01
  4 in total

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