Literature DB >> 28279067

Re-stratification of Patients with High-Risk Prostate Cancer According to the NCCN Guidelines among Patients Who Underwent Radical Prostatectomy: An Analysis Based on the K-CaP Registry.

Kwang Suk Lee1, Kyo Chul Koo1, In Young Choi2, Ji Youl Lee3, Jun Hyuk Hong4, Choung-Soo Kim4, Hyun Moo Lee5, Sung Kyu Hong6, Seok-Soo Byun6, Koon Ho Rha1, Byung Ha Chung1.   

Abstract

PURPOSE: The present study aimed to re-stratify patients with high-risk prostate cancer according to the National Comprehensive Cancer Network guidelines among patients who underwent radical prostatectomy (RP).
MATERIALS AND METHODS: This study used the Korean Prostate Cancer Database registry and identified 1,060 patients with high-risk prostate cancer who underwent RP between May 2001 and April 2013. All patients were categorized into risk groups, and subgroups were identified according to the type and number of high-risk factors.
RESULTS: Of the 1,060 high-risk patients, 599 (56.5%), 408 (38.5%), and 53 (5.0%) had 1, 2, and 3 risk factors, respectively. In multivariate analysis, the Gleason score, percentage of positive biopsy cores, and number of risk factors present were identified as independent predictors of biochemical recurrence. There were significant differences in the 5-year postoperative biochemical failure-free survival (BCFFS) rate among the different high-risk factor subgroups (log-rank p < 0.001). There were no significant differences in the BCFFS rate between the subgroup of high-risk patients with a prostate-specific antigen level > 20 ng/mL alone and the intermediate-risk group with all factors (log-rank p=0.919 and p=0.781, respectively). Additionally, no significant difference was noted in the BCFFS rate between high-risk patients having all factors and those in the very-high-risk group (p=0.566).
CONCLUSION: We successfully re-stratified patients with high-risk prostate cancer and identified the combinations of high-risk criteria that will help in the selection of patients for RP.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Prostatectomy; Prostatic neoplasms; Risk assessment

Mesh:

Year:  2017        PMID: 28279067      PMCID: PMC5784647          DOI: 10.4143/crt.2016.494

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Cancer Res Treat        ISSN: 1598-2998            Impact factor:   4.679


Introduction

Prostate cancer (PCa) has been reported to be the most common malignancy among elderly men in Western countries [1,2]. In Asia, the incidence and detection of PCa have recently increased. Several factors, including environmental factors, changes in Western dietary habits, medical advances in laboratory diagnosis, and campaigns for prostate-specific antigen (PSA) screening, are believed to be associated with the increased incidence of PCa [3]. A previous study has reported that many patients present with locally advanced disease [4]. Several treatment options, including radical prostatectomy (RP), radiation therapy (RT), androgen deprivation therapy (ADT), and multidisciplinary therapy, have been recommended for patients with high-risk PCa. Most previous studies that assessed the efficacy of RP, RT, or multidisciplinary therapy for patients with high-risk PCa have demonstrated extremely heterogeneous outcomes according to treatment modality [1,5-8], but there is no data from a multicenter database of high-risk patients with RP. Among patients at high risk of failure following standard therapy, RP allows for treatment individualization by carefully selecting patients who might benefit from treatment. Therefore, it is necessary to revisit the classification system and attempt to better stratify patients within this heterogeneous high-risk PCa group. There is no consensus on the definition of high-risk PCa [1,5,9,10]. In practice, patients with PCa are treated based on the recommendations of the National Comprehensive Cancer Network (NCCN) guidelines. Patients with intermediate and high-risk PCa with multiple adverse factors may be shifted to the next highest risk subgroup [9]. Recently, the NCCN guidelines recommended that patients with high-risk PCa (T3a or Gleason score 8-10 or PSA > 20 ng/mL) with primary Gleason pattern 5 or more than 4 cores with Gleason score 8 to 10 should be classified as very high-risk patients, with RP recommended for select patients. Using this classification system, urologists can predict oncological outcomes, including biochemical recurrence (BCR) after definitive therapy, and select appropriate candidates for RP from among patients with high-risk PCa. The present study aimed to further classify a large cohort of patients with high-risk PCa who underwent RP according to the NCCN guidelines.

Materials and Methods

The study used the Korean Prostate Cancer Database (K-CaP) registry. The K-CaP registry was established in 2014 as the first registry for comprehensive data collection with regard to Korean patients with PCa who underwent RP [11]. Patients with PCa who underwent RP at five Korean tertiary referral hospitals (Asan Medical Center, Samsung Medical Center, Seoul National University Bundang Hospital, Seoul St. Mary’s Hospital, and Yonsei University Severance Hospital) between 2001 and 2012 were eligible for inclusion in the K-CaP registry. The K-CaP registry included a total of 3,206 patients. Patients with a PSA level > 20 ng/mL, a Gleason score of 8-10 on prostate biopsy, or a clinical stage of T3a using prostate magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) were considered to have high-risk PCa according to the 2016 NCCN guidelines [9]. After excluding patients who received neoadjuvant ADT and those without complete clinicopathological data, 1,060 patients with high-risk PCa were finally enrolled in this study. The MRI data of the enrolled patients were interpreted by radiologists in the urology department at each participating hospital. The final pathology was determined using RP specimens and was reported by the pathologists in the urology department of each institution. The clinicopathological stage was assigned according to the 2002 TNM staging system, and prostate biopsy cores were obtained with transrectal ultrasound guidance using a > 10-core biopsy protocol. An adverse pathologic feature was defined as the occurrence of pathologic stage ≥ T3b cancer. The percent of positive biopsy cores as a continuous variable was defined as the positive core count divided by the total core count. Clinicopathological data, such as age at surgery, previous medical history, PSA level at diagnosis, prostate size on preoperative imaging studies, prostate biopsy-related variables, operative method, and pathological outcomes (pathological stage, Gleason score, and surgical margin status), were extracted from the K-CaP registry. Biochemical failure (BCF) was defined as (1) a confirmed rise in the PSA level above the threshold of 0.2 ng/mL, (2) a failure of PSA to fall to undetectable levels, or (3) the use of additional therapy including RT or ADT. This study was performed after obtaining approval from the Institutional Review Board (2016-0493-001). The patient and tumor characteristics were compared using Pearson’s chi-square test and Student’s t test. Cox univariate and multivariate analyses were performed to assess the clinical variables predictive of BCF in all patients with high-risk PCa. The postoperative BCF-free survival (BCFFS) rate of each patient group was calculated and compared using Kaplan-Meier analysis with a log-rank test. All statistical analyses were performed using SPSS ver. 21 (IBM Corp., Armonk, NY). A p-value of < 0.05 was considered to indicate a statistically significant difference.

Results

Table 1 presents the baseline characteristics of the intermediate-risk, high-risk, and very-high-risk PCa groups based on the NCCN guidelines. Of the 1,060 patients with high-risk PCa included in this study, open RP, laparoscopic RP, and robot-assisted laparoscopic prostatectomy were performed in 359 (33.9%), 17 (1.6%), and 684 (64.5%) patients, respectively. The median duration of postoperative follow-up was 48.8 months (interquartile range, 32.0 to 60.0 months). The number of patients with 1, 2, and 3 risk factors was 599 (56.5%), 408 (38.5%), and 53 (5.0%), respectively. According to the risk classification, the mean PSA level was 15.68 ng/mL for one risk factor, 23.92 ng/mL for two risk factors, and 38.96 ng/mL for three risk factors, respectively (p < 0.001). The proportions of the clinical stage were different between the three groups (≤ T2a, 72.4%, 45.9%, and 0%; cT2b-cT2c, 14.5%, 33.4% and 0%; cT3a, 13.0%, 20.6%, and 100.0% for 1, 2, and 3 risk factors, respectively [p < 0.001]). There were significant differences in the rates of adverse pathological features among the different high-risk factor subgroups (1 vs. 2 vs. 3, 3.5% vs. 19.1% vs. 20.8%; p=0.001). The proportion of perineural invasion increased with the number of risk factors (1 vs. 2 vs. 3, 50.6% vs. 63.0% vs. 83.0%; p=0.001).
Table 1.

Characteristics of the intermediate-risk, high-risk, and very-high-risk prostate cancer groups

CharacteristicIntermediate riskHigh risk
Very high risk
All1 Criterion2 Criteria3 Criteriap-value
No. of patients5591,060599 (56.5)408 (38.5)53 (5.0)68
Age (yr)64.4±7.364.7±7.164.2±7.565.1±6.767.0±6.30.02666.0±6.3
BMI (kg/m2)21.91±7.1521.03±8.3619.66±9.3022.58±6.8024.16±4.52< 0.00119.96±9.32
Prostate volume (cm3)34.56±15.5636.16±16.9336.16±16.5636.03±16.5138.26±23.53< 0.00137.73±20.22
PSA (ng/mL)16.98±21.7018.87±25.5513.68±2.7623.92±37.8938.96±33.15< 0.00123.95±24.16
Biopsy Gleason score
 ≤ 6121 (21.6)268 (25.3)241 (40.2)27 (6.6)0< 0.0013 (4.4)
 7438 (78.4)245 (23.1)188 (31.4)57 (14.0)06 (8.8)
 8-100547 (51.6)170 (28.4)324 (79.4)53 (100)8 (11.8)
Clinical stage
 T2559 (100)907 (85.6)583 (97.3)324 (79.4)0< 0.00145 (66.2)
 T30153 (14.4)16 (2.7)84 (20.6)53 (100)23 (33.8)
 T4000000
Pathologic Gleason score
 ≤ 6305 (54.8)204 (19.2)183 (30.6)21 (5.1)0< 0.0010
 7234 (42.0)608 (57.4)378 (63.1)211 (51.7)19 (35.8)22 (32.8)
 8-1018 (3.2)248 (23.4)38 (6.3)176 (43.2)34 (64.2)45 (67.2)
Pathologic stage
 T2382 (68.6)693 (65.4)467 (78.0)217 (53.2)9 (17.0)< 0.00112 (17.9)
 T3175 (31.4)364 (34.3)132 (22.0)188 (46.1)44 (83.0)54 (80.6)
 T403 (0.3)03 (0.7)01 (1.5)

Values are presented as mean±standard deivation or number (%). BMI, body mass index; PSA, prostate-specific antigen.

In the multivariate Cox proportional hazards models, including age, body mass index, PSA level (> 20 ng/mL vs. 20 ng/mL), PSA density, stage (T3a vs. ≤ T2c), Gleason score (≥ 8 vs. ≤ 7), and percent of positive biopsy cores, we found that PSA level, PSA density, stage, Gleason score, and percent of positive biopsy cores were independent predictors of BCF in the high-risk PCa group. Of high-risk factors, the strongest predictor of progression and mortality was the Gleason score (Table 2). We evaluated the comparative survival of and number of high-risk factors (≥ 2 vs. 1) after adjustment for covariates considered potential predictors by the Cox proportional hazards analysis for BCF (hazard ratio, 1.36; 1.016 to 1.826; p=0.039).
Table 2.

Univariate and multivariate analyses for the identification of the significant predictors of postoperative biochemical failure in the high-risk group

VariableUnivariate analysis
Multivariate analysis
Hazard ratio (95% CI)p-valueHazard ratio (95% CI)p-value
Age (yr)[a)]1.01 (0.996-1.027)0.148--
BMI (< 25 kg/m2 vs. ≥ 25 kg/m2)1.04 (0.890-1.207)0.641--
Prostate volume (cm3)[a)]1.00 (0.991-1.001)0.081--
PSAD (ng/mL/cm3)[a)]1.59 (1.440-1.764)< 0.0011.33 (1.162-1.515)< 0.001
PSA (> 20 ng/mL vs. 20 ng/mL)-< 0.0011.66 (1.355-2.030)< 0.001
Stage (T3a vs. ≤ T2c)2.86 (2.325-3.524)< 0.0011.51 (1.112-2.036)< 0.001
Gleason score (≥ 8 vs. ≤ 7)2.83 (2.422-3.298)< 0.0012.00 (1.623-2.461)< 0.001
Positive biopsy core (%)[a)]1.14 (1.111-1.178)< 0.0011.93 (1.333-2.778)< 0.001

CI, confidence interval; BMI, body mass index; PSAD, prostate-specific antigen density; PSA, prostate-specific antigen.

Continuous variable.

We found significant differences in the 5-year postoperative BCFFS rate among the different high-risk factor subgroups (1 vs. 2 vs. 3, 43.0% vs. 21.0% vs. 0%; log-rank p < 0.001). However, there was no significant difference in the BCFFS rate between the high-risk group with one factor and the intermediate-risk group with all factors (log-rank p=0.919) (Fig. 1). On further analyzing the high-risk group with one factor, we found that the BCFFS rate was similar between the subgroup of patients with a PSA level > 20 ng/mL alone and the intermediate-risk group with all factors (log-rank p=0.781, p=0.001, and p < 0.001 for the factors, respectively). On comparing biochemical outcomes between patients having all high-risk factors and those in the very-high-risk group, no significant difference was found in the BCFFS rate (log-rank p=0.566).
Fig. 1.

Biochemical recurrence (BCR) in the very-low-risk, low-risk, intermediate-risk, high-risk, very-high-risk, and metastatic-risk groups.

Discussion

In the present study, we observed heterogeneous pathological and biochemical outcomes among patients who underwent RP for high-risk PCa according to the NCCN guidelines [9]. We found that BCFFS was related to the number of high-risk factors. This study will help in the selection of patients for RP using combinations of present high-risk criteria. Overall, our findings support the accurate characterization of patients with high-risk PCa according to the new NCCN risk stratification. The main considerations when deciding on PCa treatment are the risk factors, including the PSA level, TNM clinical stage, Gleason score, age, and comorbidities. At present, urologists face the dilemma of deciding which treatment is best adapted for patients with high-risk PCa: RP, RT, or multidisciplinary therapy. Several studies have assessed risk stratification using different approaches, such as the Kattan nomogram and Cancer of the Prostate Risk Assessment [12,13]. With regard to digital rectal examination and computed tomography, clinical staging can be imprecise for the evaluation of extraprostatic disease. MRI is believed to improve the accuracy of clinical staging. In our study, all patients were stratified into new risk groups according to the NCCN guidelines using prostate MRI for precise clinical staging. Clinically useful criteria for defining high-risk PCa should reliably distinguish patients who might be optimal candidates for RP. Prospective randomized trials have been performed to provide insight into treatment strategies; however, the optimal strategy has not been definitively identified [14-16]. The NCCN guidelines suggest criteria that divide patients with high-risk PCa into various groups according to distinct clinical outcomes. The very-high-risk group is defined by the following criteria at diagnosis: a primary Gleason pattern of 5 or > 4 cores with a Gleason score of 8-10 and clinical stage T3b-4. Therefore, there have been no previous studies with a proper target patient group. High-risk patients are generally at an elevated risk for early BCR, metastatic progression, and death from PCa [10,17,18]. Therefore, a consensus on the definition of high-risk PCa is considered a priority [3]. Yossepowitch et al. [17] reported that the 5-year biochemical recurrence-free survival rate ranged from 49% to 80% according to eight different definitions of high-risk PCa. In this study, a PSA level > 20 ng/mL, stage cT3, and a positive biopsy core with a Gleason score of 8-10 individually or in combination were considered factors associated with high-risk disease. Joniau et al. [19] compared PCa-specific survival using seven different definitions of high-risk PCa to classify 1,632 patients treated with RP. The authors suggested stratification of patients with high-risk PCa into the following three subgroups: good prognosis subgroup (1 high-risk factor); intermediate prognosis subgroup (PSA level > 20 ng/ mL and stage cT3-4); and poor prognosis subgroup (Gleason score 8-10 in combination with at least 1 other high-risk factor). Because of the lack of a definition of high-risk PCa, studies have subclassified high-risk PCa into different prognostic categories [20,21]. An elevated PSA level (> 20 ng/mL) alone is not enough to define a high-risk patient. Spahn et al. [22] reported that the strongest predictor of prostatectomy was the Gleason score in patients with PSA > 20 ng/mL, and the risk levels affected disease progression and PCa-specific mortality. We found that the BCFFS rate was not different between patients having 1 high-risk factor (PSA level > 20 ng/mL) and patients in the intermediate-risk group having all factors. With regard to the PSA level, there can be fluctuations that result from several factors, including benign prostatic hyperplasia and other nonmalignant conditions. Considering that many individuals present with PSA >20 ng/mL as their only high-risk factor, they may present with favorable pathologic characteristics and could be appropriate candidates for surgery. As expected, pathologic features and progression were significantly different among the three risk categories. In patients with one high-risk factor, heterogeneous pathological and biochemical outcomes were found. Patients whose only high-risk factor was an elevated PSA level (> 20 ng/mL) had a similar prognosis to the intermediate-risk group of patients with all factors. The BCFFS rate was not different between patients with three high-risk factors and patients in the very-high-risk group. Our results are consistent with the recommendation of the NCCN guidelines that the intermediate-risk group and patients with high-risk PCa with multiple adverse factors may be shifted to the next risk group. For patients with high-risk PCa whose only risk factor is elevated PSA level (> 20 ng/mL), we can recommend RP as the initial therapy in accordance with the intermediate-risk group, and the high-risk groups with all risk factors should be considered for multidisciplinary therapy instead of RP. In conclusion, the clinician could schedule patients already treated with RP and pelvic lymph node dissection for appropriate postoperative management. K-CaP is currently designing future studies to evaluate whether early postoperative treatments should consequently be reserved for cases of BCF. Our study has important strengths. To our knowledge, this is the first study to provide consistent predictions of appropriate oncological endpoints in patients presenting with high-risk PCa, based on the number and precise combination of risk factors. Few previous studies have described the outcomes of surgery in patients with high-risk PCa, and most of these studies have presented a small series or a single-center experience. Specifically, after extracting unfavorable factors, including a primary Gleason pattern of 5 or > 4 cores with a Gleason score of 8-10, from the high-risk factors to identify a group of men within the current NCCN high-risk category who are at greatest risk of metastasis or cancer-related death despite conventional treatment [23]. our study indicated which patients may require surgery and which patients may not require surgery. Most previous studies aimed to validate the subset of the high-risk group according to the oncological outcomes within each risk group [20,24,25]. The present study identified the oncological outcomes of each subgroup based on the number of risk factors after comparison with those in the other risk groups in patients with high-risk PCa. Furthermore, there were three subgroups according to the number of high-risk factors, and the outcomes, including BCFFS, were compared to those for the next lowest and highest groups. Although this study had several strengths, there were some limitations. Several factors could account for the heterogeneity in the results, including the presence of multiple physicians and the variability of intraoperative management. Additionally, there was heterogeneity of the treated patients. Multiple factors influenced the clinical decision-making, including age, performance status, and preoperative clinicopathological results. In particular, the data on comorbidity that may have affected treatment policies were not perfect. In addition, because of factors such as comorbidities, the prognosis of patients who received other treatments was not known. In our retrospective cohort, all MRI and pathological results were not centrally investigated but were assessed by radiologists and pathologists in the urology department at each institution. Another limitation is the relatively short follow-up period for patients treated with RP, which did not allow analysis of metastasis-free survival or cancer-specific survival. For further survival evaluation, the follow-up period should be longer, and more multicenter trials are needed to clarify whether the oncological outcomes are similar between a high-risk group with a PSA level > 20 ng/mL and an intermediate-risk group with all risk factors. Moreover, it may not be possible to extend our finding of a similar BCFFS rate between patients having all high-risk factors and patients in the very-high-risk group to high-risk patients undergoing radiotherapy or systemic therapy. In the present study, we successfully re-stratified patients with high-risk PCa and noted that the use of combinations of present high-risk criteria will help in the selection of patients for RP. Additionally, we noted heterogeneity in biochemical outcomes among patients with high-risk PCa who underwent RP. The postoperative BCFFS rate appears to be similar between patients having 1 high-risk factor (PSA > 20 ng/mL) and patients in the intermediate-risk group and between patients having three high-risk factors and patients in the very-high-risk group.
  25 in total

1.  Stratification of Contemporary Patients Undergoing Radical Prostatectomy for High-risk Prostate Cancer.

Authors:  Jung Ki Jo; Ha Rim Kook; Seok-Soo Byun; Sang Eun Lee; Sung Kyu Hong
Journal:  Ann Surg Oncol       Date:  2014-11-15       Impact factor: 5.344

2.  A preoperative nomogram for disease recurrence following radical prostatectomy for prostate cancer.

Authors:  M W Kattan; J A Eastham; A M Stapleton; T M Wheeler; P T Scardino
Journal:  J Natl Cancer Inst       Date:  1998-05-20       Impact factor: 13.506

3.  Stratification of high-risk prostate cancer into prognostic categories: a European multi-institutional study.

Authors:  Steven Joniau; Alberto Briganti; Paolo Gontero; Giorgio Gandaglia; Lorenzo Tosco; Steffen Fieuws; Bertrand Tombal; Giansilvio Marchioro; Jochen Walz; Burkhard Kneitz; Pia Bader; Detlef Frohneberg; Alessandro Tizzani; Markus Graefen; Paul van Cangh; R Jeffrey Karnes; Francesco Montorsi; Hein Van Poppel; Martin Spahn
Journal:  Eur Urol       Date:  2014-01-25       Impact factor: 20.096

4.  Adjuvant androgen deprivation for high-risk prostate cancer after radical prostatectomy: SWOG S9921 study.

Authors:  Tanya B Dorff; Thomas W Flaig; Catherine M Tangen; Maha H A Hussain; Gregory P Swanson; David P Wood; Wael A Sakr; Nancy A Dawson; Naomi B Haas; E David Crawford; Nicholas J Vogelzang; Ian M Thompson; L Michael Glode
Journal:  J Clin Oncol       Date:  2011-04-18       Impact factor: 44.544

5.  The University of California, San Francisco Cancer of the Prostate Risk Assessment score: a straightforward and reliable preoperative predictor of disease recurrence after radical prostatectomy.

Authors:  Matthew R Cooperberg; David J Pasta; Eric P Elkin; Mark S Litwin; David M Latini; Janeen Du Chane; Peter R Carroll
Journal:  J Urol       Date:  2005-06       Impact factor: 7.450

6.  Secondary therapy, metastatic progression, and cancer-specific mortality in men with clinically high-risk prostate cancer treated with radical prostatectomy.

Authors:  Ofer Yossepowitch; Scott E Eggener; Angel M Serio; Brett S Carver; Fernando J Bianco; Peter T Scardino; James A Eastham
Journal:  Eur Urol       Date:  2007-10-12       Impact factor: 20.096

7.  Predicting prostate cancer mortality among men with intermediate to high-risk disease and multiple unfavorable risk factors.

Authors:  Paul L Nguyen; Ming-Hui Chen; William J Catalona; Judd W Moul; Leon Sun; Anthony V D'Amico
Journal:  Int J Radiat Oncol Biol Phys       Date:  2008-08-07       Impact factor: 7.038

8.  Subclassification of high-risk clinically organ-confined prostate cancer for early cancer-specific mortality after radical prostatectomy.

Authors:  Takashi Kobayashi; Takahiro Kimura; Chunwoo Lee; Takahiro Inoue; Naoki Terada; Yuka Kono; Tomomi Kamba; Choung-Soo Kim; Shin Egawa; Osamu Ogawa
Journal:  Jpn J Clin Oncol       Date:  2016-05-20       Impact factor: 3.019

9.  Phase III postoperative adjuvant radiotherapy after radical prostatectomy compared with radical prostatectomy alone in pT3 prostate cancer with postoperative undetectable prostate-specific antigen: ARO 96-02/AUO AP 09/95.

Authors:  Thomas Wiegel; Dirk Bottke; Ursula Steiner; Alessandra Siegmann; Reinhard Golz; Stephan Störkel; Norman Willich; Axel Semjonow; Rainer Souchon; Michael Stöckle; Christian Rübe; Lothar Weissbach; Peter Althaus; Udo Rebmann; Tilman Kälble; Horst Jürgen Feldmann; Manfred Wirth; Axel Hinke; Wolfgang Hinkelbein; Kurt Miller
Journal:  J Clin Oncol       Date:  2009-05-11       Impact factor: 44.544

10.  The Establishment of K-CaP (the Multicenter Korean Prostate Cancer Database).

Authors:  Dong Hoon Lee; Seung Hwan Lee; Koon Ho Rha; In Young Choi; Ji Youl Lee; Sae Woong Kim; Sangchul Lee; Sung Kyu Hong; Seok-Soo Byun; In Gab Jeong; Jun Hyuk Hong; Choung-Soo Kim; Hwang Gyun Jeon; Hyun Moo Lee; Byung Ha Chung
Journal:  Korean J Urol       Date:  2013-04-16
View more
  2 in total

1.  Ten-Year Results From a Phase II Study on Image Guided, Intensity Modulated Radiation Therapy With Simultaneous Integrated Boost in High-Risk Prostate Cancer.

Authors:  Christian Ekanger; Svein Inge Helle; Daniel Heinrich; Dag Clement Johannessen; Ása Karlsdóttir; Yngve Nygård; Ole Johan Halvorsen; Lars Reisæter; Rune Kvåle; Liv Bolstad Hysing; Olav Dahl
Journal:  Adv Radiat Oncol       Date:  2019-12-09

2.  Prognosis of men with high-risk prostate cancer stratified by risk factors: a population-based retrospective cohort study.

Authors:  Pan Song; Jiaxiang Wang; Mengxuan Shu; Xiaoyu Di; Yaxin Li; Yuxin Qing; Qiang Dong
Journal:  Transl Cancer Res       Date:  2020-10       Impact factor: 1.241

  2 in total

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.