| Literature DB >> 29357874 |
Daniel Buergy1, Vincent Schneiberg2, Joerg Schaefer2, Grit Welzel2, Lutz Trojan3, Christian Bolenz4, Frederik Wenz2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Patient-reported health-related quality of life (HRQOL) differs between treatment options for prostate carcinoma. Long-term HRQOL data in brachytherapy series are scarce. Therefore, we analyzed prostate-specific and general HRQOL in patients treated with brachytherapy for prostate carcinoma after long-term follow-up.Entities:
Keywords: Brachytherapy; PRO; Patient reported outcome; Prostate carcinoma; QOL; Quality of life
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29357874 PMCID: PMC5778674 DOI: 10.1186/s12955-018-0844-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Health Qual Life Outcomes ISSN: 1477-7525 Impact factor: 3.186
Characteristics and outcome of patients treated with brachytherapy
| Characteristics | Initial Cohort | |
|---|---|---|
| Gleason Score | ≤ 6 | 173 (58.4%) |
| > 6 | 32 (10.8%) | |
| Unknown | 91 (30.7%) | |
| Preoperative PSA value | ≤ 10 ng/ml | 208 (70.3%) |
| > 10 (−20) ng/ml | 62 (20.9%) | |
| > 20 ng/ml | 26 (8.8%) | |
| Risk groupa | Low | 110 (37.1%) |
| Intermediate | 26 (8.8%) | |
| High | 52 (17.6%) | |
| Unknown | 90 (30.4%) | |
| T3 ( | 18 (6.1%) | |
| Endpoint | Clinical outcome | Number of Patients (Percentage) |
| All patients | 296 (100%) | |
| Overall survival in all | Died before 2004 (Original cohort) | 38 (12.8%) |
| Unknown | 100 (33.8%) | |
| All deaths | 70 (100%) | |
| Causes of death in 70 patients who had died. | Prostate carcinoma | 20 (28.6%) |
| Patients contacted | 120 (100%) | |
| Biochemical recurrence at any time in | Biochemical recurrence present at any time | 22 (18.3%) |
| No biochemical recurrence | 68 (56.7%) | |
| Unknown biochemical outcome | 30 (25%) | |
| All patients with biochemical recurrence | 22 (100%) | |
| Clinical recurrence in patients who are alive and had biochemical recurrence | Local recurrence at any time | 10 (45.4%) |
aPatients with unknown Gleason Score were classified as high risk, if any high risk criteria were met (e.g. patients with PSA > 20 ng/ml were considered as high risk, even in case of unknown Gleason Score)
bCardiovascular includes: Myocardial infarction, stroke, cerebral hemorrhage in a Marcumar patient, ruptured aortic aneurism, and cardiac arrest in coronary heart disease
cInfection includes pneumonia and sepsis
Fig. 1EORTC-QLQ-C30 scales after long-term follow-up in patients treated with brachytherapy compared to the German reference population. Age stratification according to Schwarz and Hinz [18], 1a) Population ≥ 70 years old and 1b) Population 60–69 years old. Higher function values indicate better function. Higher symptom values indicate worse symptoms. Bars represent mean values. Lines show standard deviations
Mean QLQ-PR25 values of the brachytherapy group after 51 months compared to the long-term follow-up after 141 months. There are two columns for the first follow-up, the first one shows only the (4.3-year) results for patients alive after long-term follow-up; the second shows the results for all patients
| Item or scale | Follow-up 4.3 years; only long-term survivors shown | Follow-up 4.3 years all patients shown | Follow-up 11.7 years |
|---|---|---|---|
| Urinary-related symptoms | 25.6 (SD = 19.1; | 29.7 (SD = 23.7; | 24.3 (SD = 21.8; n = 79) |
| Bowel-related symptoms | 7.3 (SD = 14.1; | 8.2 (SD = 13.4; | 8.5 (SD = 12.3; |
| Hormone treatment-related symptoms | 11.2 (SD = 11.6; n = 74) | 15.5 (SD = 16.1; | 14.7 (SD = 16.0; |
| Sexual activity | 51.1 (SD = 29.1; n = 76) | 45.5 (SD = 32.4; | 40.5 (SD = 31.2; n = 74) |
| Sexual function | 61.6 (SD = 19.3; | 57.5 (SD = 23.7; | 64.5 (SD = 23.1; |
| Bother due to use of an incontinence aid | 50 (SD = 45.9; n = 6) | 43.4 (SD = 38.6; | 66.7 (SD = 36; |
| Incontinencea | 7.5% | 12.9% | 16.3% |
aEstimated by percentage of patients wearing an incontinence aid