| Literature DB >> 27227813 |
Jan T Poleszczuk1, Peter A Johnstone2, Heiko Enderling1,2.
Abstract
It is estimated that about 10% of new prostate cancer (PCa) cases are lymph node-positive (LN+). We have previously discussed the role of the inflection point (IP) of an inverse Gompertzian survival curve as a surrogate for disease incurability. In this study, we aimed to stratify curability of different patient cohorts with pathologically positive lymph nodes through modeling survival curves by different percentages of LN involvement (%LN+) postoperatively and calculating associated IPs. From the Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results (SEER) database, we selected LN+ PCa patients undergoing radical prostatectomy. Modeling of relative survival curves using inverse Gompertzian kinetics for increasing value of maximal %LN+ involvement allowed stratification of cohort into groups with <10%, 10-40%, and greater or equal to 40% of LN+ out of all LNs sampled. Data were retrieved for 5903 patients. For the entire cohort, relative survival was 96%, 87%, and 76% at 5, 10, and 15 years, respectively. For %LN +, <10% the IP was about 27 years postoperatively. Patients with 10-40% LN+ had an IP at about 10 years; for those with more than 40% LN+, the IP was 7 years. A 10-year relative survival decreases from 97% for <10% LN+ to 71% for more than 40% LN+. While better therapies for LN + PCa are badly needed, this patient cadre is not homogenous and should be stratified by %LN+ in future clinical trials.Entities:
Keywords: Health services research; lymph node-positive; mathematical oncology; relative survival
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27227813 PMCID: PMC4884636 DOI: 10.1002/cam4.776
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancer Med ISSN: 2045-7634 Impact factor: 4.452
Whole cohort characteristics
| Number of patients (N) | 5903 |
|---|---|
| Age | 62.48 ± 7.4 |
| Race(%) | |
| White | 83.64 |
| Black | 11.54 |
| Other | 4.3 |
| Unknown | 0.53 |
| Morphology/grade(%) | |
| Well differentiated; grade I | 0.71 |
| Moderately differentiated; grade II | 20.94 |
| Poorly differentiated; grade III | 76.61 |
| Undifferentiated; grade IV | 1.19 |
| Unknown | 0.56 |
| Radiation(%) | |
| No | 76.15 |
| Yes | 20.63 |
| Unknown | 3.22 |
Figure 1Calculated observed (A) and relative (B) survival curves for the whole analyzed cohort (red solid curve) and subcohort of white patients with grade III tumors who did not receive radiotherapy (blue solid curve). Dotted lines show 95% confidence intervals. N = size of the cohort; P‐value calculated using two‐tailed log‐rank test.
Figure 2Stratification by the relative number of positive lymph nodes (%LN+). (A) Distribution of %LN+ in the whole cohort. (B) Calculated inflection points resulting from estimated relative survival curves for cohorts generated based on different LN% inclusion criteria.
Figure 3Estimated relative survival curves for %LN stratified cohorts. (A) Whole cohort. (B) White patients with grade III tumors not receiving radiotherapy.
Figure 4Results of relative survival modeling for each considered %LN+ group. (A), (B) Best fitting inverse Gompertz curves (Eqn. (1)) for parameters summarized in Table 2. (C), (D) Derivatives of fitted curves together with calculated inflection points (circles).
Estimated parameters for inverse Gompertzian kinetics (Eq. (1)) and all considered patient cohorts
| <10% LN+ | 10–40% LN+ | ≥40% LN+ | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Whole cohort | |||
|
| 1.985 | 0.337 | 0.469 |
|
| 9.016 | 6.15 | 4.51 |
|
| 0.082 | 0.189 | 0.222 |
| White, Grade III, no radiotherapy | |||
|
| 0.513 | 0.579 | 0.616 |
|
| 4.64 | 5.22 | 4 |
|
| 0.096 | 0.151 | 0.203 |
LN+, positive lymph node.