| Literature DB >> 26125012 |
Jeffrey Shevach1, Emily Jane Gallagher2, Teena Kochukoshy1, Victoria Gresia1, Manpreet Brar1, Matthew D Galsky1, William K Oh1.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To determine if a concurrent diagnosis of diabetes mellitus is associated with worse outcomes in advanced prostate cancer (PC). The effect diabetes may have on the progression of advanced PC is poorly understood.Entities:
Keywords: androgen deprivation therapy; diabetes mellitus; hormone-sensitive prostate cancer; insulin resistance and cancer; time to castration-resistant prostate cancer
Year: 2015 PMID: 26125012 PMCID: PMC4467174 DOI: 10.3389/fonc.2015.00129
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Oncol ISSN: 2234-943X Impact factor: 6.244
Figure 1Study design: 127 hormone-sensitive patients in the database were treated with ADT for advanced PC. Of those patients, 47 began treatment without radiographic evidence of metastases, 87 hormone-sensitive patients progressed to CRPC, and an additional 21 patients were treated for CRPC whose clinical data from their hormone-sensitive state was not available, totaling 108 patients with CRPC in the study. In all subset of patients, outcomes were compared between patients with diabetes and those without diabetes.
Characteristics of eligible patients.
| Characteristic | Without DM | With DM |
|---|---|---|
| Age at start of therapy (years) | ||
| Median | 68 | 73 |
| Interquartile range | 63-75 | 66-78 |
| Race (%) | ||
| White | 70 (61.9) | 20 (57.1) |
| Black | 23 (20.4) | 7 (20.0) |
| Hispanic | 9 (8.0) | 4 (11.5) |
| Other | 8 (7.1) | 2 (5.7) |
| Not reported | 3 (2.6) | 2 (5.7) |
| Gleason score (%) | ||
| ≤7 | 37 (32.7) | 10 (28.6) |
| 8–10 | 56 (49.6) | 19 (54.3) |
| Missing data | 20 (17.7) | 6 (17.1) |
| Metastatic disease at start of ADT (%) | ||
| Yes | 71 (62.8) | 22 (62.9) |
| No | 42 (37.2) | 13 (37.1) |
| PSA level at start of therapy (ng/mL) | ||
| Median | 18.33 | 25.39 |
| Interquartile range | 5.1–83 | 3.03–71.14 |
Figure 2Kaplan–Meier plot of time to CRPC from onset of ADT. (A) Time to CRPC in all hormone-sensitive patients (N = 127). There was no difference between patients with diabetes or without diabetes (p = 0.46). (B) Time to CRPC in patients without radiographic evidence of metastases (N = 47). Patients with diabetes in this subset were observed to progress to CRPC significantly faster than patients without diabetes (HR for progression with diabetes = 4.58; 95% CI: 1.92–10.94; p = 0.0006).