Literature DB >> 32259466

Does Time Spent on Active Surveillance Adversely Affect the Pathological and Oncologic Outcomes in Patients Undergoing Delayed Radical Prostatectomy?

Ardalan E Ahmad1, Patrick O Richard1,2, Ricardo Leão1, Mohammad Hajiha1, Lisa J Martin1, Maria Komisarenko1, Ruby Grewal1, Hanan Goldberg1, Sepehr Salem1, Kunal Jain1, Ava Oliaei1, Ivan Horyn1, Narhari Timilshina1, Alexandre Zlotta1, Robert Hamilton1, Girish Kulkarni1, Neil Fleshner1, Shabbir M H Alibhaic3,4,5, Antonio Finelli1.   

Abstract

PURPOSE: Pathological and oncologic outcomes of delayed radical prostatectomy following prostate cancer active surveillance are not well established. We determined the pathological and oncologic outcomes of favorable risk, Grade Group 1, prostate cancer managed with active surveillance and progressing to radical prostatectomy for clinically significant prostate cancer (GG 2 or greater).
MATERIALS AND METHODS: Between 1992 and 2015, 170 men with favorable risk prostate cancer underwent delayed radical prostatectomy for clinically significant prostate cancer (ASRP) at the Princess Margaret Cancer Centre. Pathological and oncologic outcomes of the ASRP cohort were compared with a matched cohort treated with upfront radical prostatectomy (405) immediately before surgery. Biochemical recurrence-free survival, overall survival and cancer specific survival were compared. We examined the association between delayed radical prostatectomy and adverse pathology at radical prostatectomy and biochemical recurrence using logistic and Cox regression analyses, respectively.
RESULTS: Median time spent on active surveillance before radical prostatectomy was 31.0 months. At radical prostatectomy pT3 (extraprostatic extension, seminal vesicle invasion), positive surgical margin, and pN1 rates were comparable between the 2 cohorts. Median followup after radical prostatectomy was 5.6 years. The 5-year biochemical recurrence-free survival rate in the ASRP cohort and upfront radical prostatectomy cohort were 85.8% and 82.4%, respectively (p=0.38). Overall survival and cancer specific survival were comparable between the 2 groups. Delayed radical prostatectomy was not associated with adverse pathological outcomes and biochemical recurrence on regression analyses.
CONCLUSIONS: Curative intent radical prostatectomy after a period of active surveillance results in excellent pathological and oncologic outcomes at 5 years. A period of active surveillance does not result in inferior outcomes compared to patients with similar risk characteristics undergoing upfront radical prostatectomy.

Entities:  

Keywords:  prostatectomy; prostatic neoplasms; treatment outcome; watchful waiting

Year:  2020        PMID: 32259466     DOI: 10.1097/JU.0000000000001070

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Urol        ISSN: 0022-5347            Impact factor:   7.450


  1 in total

1.  Long-term and pathological outcomes of low- and intermediate-risk prostate cancer after radical prostatectomy: implications for active surveillance.

Authors:  Valentin H Meissner; Mira Woll; Donna P Ankerst; Stefan Schiele; Jürgen E Gschwend; Kathleen Herkommer
Journal:  World J Urol       Date:  2021-05-10       Impact factor: 4.226

  1 in total

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