| Literature DB >> 26528437 |
Aurore Goineau1, Bénédicte d'Aillières2, Laure de Decker3, Stéphane Supiot4.
Abstract
Despite current advancements in the field, management of older prostate cancer patients still remains a big challenge for Geriatric Oncology. The International Society of Geriatric Oncology (ISGO) has recently updated its recommendations in this area, and these have been widely adopted, notably by the European Association of Urology. This article outlines the principles that should be observed in the management of elderly patients who have recently undergone prostatectomy for malignancy or with a biochemical relapse following prostatectomy. Further therapeutic intervention should not be considered in those patients who are classified as frail in the geriatric assessment. In patients presenting better health conditions, salvage radiotherapy is to be preferred to adjuvant radiotherapy, which is only indicated in certain exceptional cases. Radiotherapy of the operative bed presents a higher risk to the elderly. Additionally, hormone therapy clearly shows higher side effects in older patients and therefore it should not be administered to asymptomatic patients. We propose a decision tree based on the ISGO recommendations, with specific modifications for patients in biochemical relapse.Entities:
Keywords: adjuvant radiotherapy; elderly patients; geriatric assessment; post-operative radiotherapy; prostate cancer; salvage radiotherapy
Year: 2015 PMID: 26528437 PMCID: PMC4606064 DOI: 10.3389/fonc.2015.00227
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Oncol ISSN: 2234-943X Impact factor: 6.244
Post operative radiotherapy adverse events according to age.
| Reference | N | Adverse event studied | cut off (years) | Hazard ratio/odds ratio |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cozzarini et al. (2012) ( | 742 | G3 long-term GU complications | 71 | HR = 4.26 (1.45–12.47), |
| Longobardi et al. (2011) ( | 178 | ≥G2 acute bowel complications | 66 | OR = 4 (0.9–18.6), |
| Perna et al. (2010) ( | 96 | ≥G2 acute bowel complications | Continuous | OR = 1.13 (1.02–1.25), |
*This study designated p < 0.1 as significant.GU: Genito-urinary
ONCODAGE scoring chart for establishing G8 score.
| 0: Severe anorexia |
| 1: Moderate anorexia |
| 2: No anorexia |
| 0: Weight loss >3 kg |
| 1: Not known |
| 2: Weight loss >1 kg and <3 kg |
| 3: No weight loss |
| 0: Bed-bound or wheelchair-bound |
| 1: Mobile within the home |
| 2: Independently mobile |
| 0: Severe dementia or depression |
| 1: Moderate dementia or depression |
| 2: No psychological problem |
| 0: BMI < 18.5 |
| 1: 18.5 ≤ BMI < 21 |
| 2: 21 ≤ BMI < 23 |
| 3: BMI ≥ 23 |
| 0: Yes |
| 1: No |
| 0: Less good |
| 0.5: Don’t know |
| 1: As good as others |
| 2: Better than others |
| 0: >85 |
| 1: 80–85 |
| 2: <80 |
Figure 1SRT: Salvage radiotherapy; ADT: androgen deprivation therapy; BSC: best supportive care.