| Literature DB >> 30034521 |
Nigel P Murray1,2, Socrates Aedo2, Cynthia Fuentealba1, Eduardo Reyes3,4, Simone Minzer1, Aníbal Salazar1.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: The classification of patients with prostate cancer is used to determine treatments based on risk factors. The presence of secondary circulating prostate tumour cells (CPCs) detected in peripheral blood after a curative treatment has been associated with a worse prognosis. We present a prospective study of CPC detection post radiotherapy and the oncological results. PATIENTS AND METHODS: All of the patients classified as low and intermediate risk that were treated with radiotherapy were included. Three months after finishing treatment, an 8-ml blood sample was taken to detect CPCs. Mononuclear cells were obtained using gel centrifugation, and CPCs were identified using immunocytochemistry with anti-prostate-specific antigen. Patients were classified as low-risk CPC positive or negative and intermediate-risk CPC positive or negative. The biochemical relapse-free survival analysis was determined based on a follow-up of up to 15 years using the Kaplan-Meier and Cox regression models. Biochemical failure was defined according to the Pheonix II criteria.Entities:
Keywords: biochemical relapse; circulating prostate cells; prostate cancer; radiotherapy
Year: 2018 PMID: 30034521 PMCID: PMC6027969 DOI: 10.3332/ecancer.2018.844
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ecancermedicalscience ISSN: 1754-6605
Subject characteristics: 241 men with low- and intermediate-risk prostate cancer treated with radiotherapy.
| Low risk | Intermediate risk | |
|---|---|---|
| Number of patients | 181 | 60 |
| Age | ||
| Gleason score: | ||
| PSA ng/ml average pre-treatment | 5.90 | 6.96 |
Figure 1.Survival rate observed (Kaplan–Meier), according to risk classification for a cohort of 241 subjects with prostate cancer followed over 15 years.
Figure 2.Survival rate observed (Kaplan–Meier), according to the presence or absence of CPC for 181 low-risk subjects, and 60 intermediate-risk subjects with prostate cancer followed over 15 years.
Survival rate, median survival rate, average survival rate restricted until biochemical failure and HR after 15 years follow-up, in accordance with low- and intermediate-risk prostate cancer, and the presence or absence of CPCs in a cohort of 241 prostate cancer patients treated with radiotherapy.
| Kaplan–Meier survival rate | Median survival | Restricted average | Hazard ratio | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Group 1 | 86.40 | Not observed | 9.71 | 1 |
| Group 2 | 58.68 | Not observed | 8.67 | 3.83 |
| Group 3 | 12.88 | 5.92 | 5.90 | 15.86 (8.09–31.08) |
| Group 4 | 6.9 | 2.25 | 3.48 | 36.75 (18.30–73.79) |
Figure 3.Survival rate observed (Kaplan–Meier), and predicted (Cox model), according to the presence or absence of CPC and group risk classification for a cohort of 241 subjects with prostate cancer followed over 15 years.