Literature DB >> 35106504

Abandon the Label of Clinically Insignificant Prostate Cancer.

Laura S Mertens1, Pim J van Leeuwen1, Henk G van der Poel1,2.   

Abstract

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Year:  2022        PMID: 35106504      PMCID: PMC8787776          DOI: 10.1016/j.euros.2021.12.012

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Eur Urol Open Sci        ISSN: 2666-1683


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It has been shown that screening programs using prostate-specific antigen (PSA) are effective in reducing the incidence of prostate cancer metastases and mortality [1]. However, these programs have also resulted in unnecessary repeat tests, as well as overdiagnosis and overtreatment of asymptomatic men with indolent prostate cancer that would not have led to prostate cancer–related death. Therefore, a risk-adapted prostate cancer screening strategy has been developed that combines PSA testing with risk calculators and multiparametric magnetic resonance imaging (mpMRI) to differentiate “significant” from “insignificant” prostate cancer. The distinction between clinically significant and insignificant prostate cancer plays a pivotal role, as it allows a reduction in overtreatment. However, defining what is clinically significant versus insignificant prostate cancer is difficult and it is important to realize that the concept of clinical insignificance should not be confused with the absence of relevance of the disease. Here, we discuss our reflections on this misinterpretation and why we should avoid wildly labeling prostate tumors as clinically insignificant. First, the lack of a clear definition creates confusion. A literature review of characteristics used to define clinically insignificant prostate cancer reveals significant variation over the years. Even the current European Association of Urology (EAU) guideline leaves room for flexibility; the term is mentioned three times in the 2021 edition [2], each time within the context of a different meaning. The criteria most frequently used for insignificant prostate cancer include clinical stage (organ-confined disease) and Gleason pattern (absence of Gleason pattern 4/5) with or without an arguable threshold for volume. Particularly in view of early diagnosis and potential deferral of treatment, the differential characteristics used to define clinically insignificant prostate cancer should not be up for interpretation. Therefore, the EAU must be encouraged to explore the heterogeneity of definitions, thresholds, and criteria for clinically insignificant prostate cancer before reintroducing the term in practice. Besides the confusing content for the definition, the nomenclature is prone to semantic misunderstandings. Insignificant means “meaningless” or “too small or unimportant to be worth considering risk”—indicating a certain innocence of the situation—while, conversely, the word cancer generally leads to anxiety. In order to avoid disruption of concern, being intentionally concrete can be useful and help in preventing confusion. Aside from “clinically insignificant”, other terms commonly used in prostate cancer include the following: indolent, latent, unimportant, low grade, and (very) low risk. From a linguistic point of view, it is important to use precise language and therefore it is better to avoid subjective words that suggest insignificance of a disease. Furthermore, from an oncological point of view, clinical insignificance does not accurately describe the content of the disease. Currently, doctors tend to consider International Society of Urological Pathology (ISUP) grade 1 (Gleason 6) clinically insignificant, with the preferred management being active surveillance. This implies a strong probability that a man will never be bothered by the disease. However, given the recommendation to not ignore this type of cancer, but to safely observe it (within active surveillance programs, including frequent PSA testing and biopsies for many years), the term clinically insignificant is already a contradiction in terms here, as long as we cannot exclude patients with tumors with the lowest malignant potential. Nevertheless, even though it is generally agreed that insignificant prostate cancer will not threaten survival, grade 1 disease may progress to higher grades over time. Up to one-third of patients on active surveillance are reclassified during follow-up, most of whom will undergo curative treatment because of disease upgrading or upstaging or patient preference [3]. Moreover, the risk of progression to metastases was 14% and prostate cancer–related death was 3% at 10 yr in a recent “active monitoring” cohort [4]. Owing to these implications, the uncertain oncological prospects, and long-term follow-up, it is hard to fathom why the diagnosis is clinically insignificant, even when active surveillance is followed. Likewise, it can be called into question how a disease can be considered clinically insignificant when we do not yet know how to reliably select insignificant cancer. Disentanglement of true (overdiagnosed) Gleason 6 tumors from those with progressive potential will require determination of other biomarkers mediating clinically aggressive versus unaggressive phenotypes. For instance, men with germline pathogenic BRCA2 mutations are more likely to be diagnosed with clinically significant prostate cancer [5]. This association was also found for MSH2 mutation carriers [6]. Furthermore, genome-wide association studies suggest that single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs), or interactions between SNPs, are linked to prostate cancer susceptibility and maybe also prostate cancer aggressiveness [7]. These examples illustrate that there are opportunities for more precise selection of clinically insignificant cancer, but this requires additional criteria that are not readily available. One could sum up this situation by saying that calling all ISUP grade 1 prostate cancer clinically insignificant is reductive. And we have not even mentioned the “obvious” factors, such as age at diagnosis, ethnicity, and lead time, that also influence the significance of a tumor. Finally, we would like to discuss the relevance of clinically insignificant prostate cancer at a financial level. Overdiagnosis reduces the financial benefits of prostate cancer screening, particularly for older men [8]. Incorporation of mpMRI into active surveillance protocols increases costs, although decreasing the intensity of testing and biopsies may be cost-effective options for men opting for conservative management of low-risk disease [9]. From both an oncological and a macroeconomic point of view, a balanced discussion of the incremental costs of early diagnosis of prostate cancer versus the potential benefits should include ways to reduce overdiagnosis. Meanwhile, we must not overlook the financial toll of cancer on a personal level, as patients with a diagnosis of cancer are more likely than the average person to experience economic distress, such as problems with insurance and bankruptcy [10]. These consequences of a cancer diagnosis are undesirable and disproportionate for healthy men with clinically insignificant disease. The EAU risk-adapted strategy facilitates identification of men at the highest risk of prostate cancer and will potentially save the lives of many each year by detecting significant cancer earlier. The success of this strategy depends on the ability to safely avoid any further diagnosis and, in particular, treatment in men with tumors with the lowest risk of progression. However, it would be better to avoid the term clinically insignificant for these cancers, simply because we cannot accurately estimate whether a tumor is significant for a patient or not. Instead, we would suggest to focus on the ([very] low) risk of a prostate cancer. The authors have nothing to disclose.
  10 in total

1.  Cost-effectiveness Analysis of Active Surveillance Strategies for Men with Low-risk Prostate Cancer.

Authors:  Niranjan J Sathianathen; Badrinath R Konety; Fernando Alarid-Escudero; Nathan Lawrentschuk; Damien M Bolton; Karen M Kuntz
Journal:  Eur Urol       Date:  2018-11-10       Impact factor: 20.096

2.  Results of Prostate Cancer Screening in a Unique Cohort at 19yr of Follow-up.

Authors:  Daniël F Osses; Sebastiaan Remmers; Fritz H Schröder; Theo van der Kwast; Monique J Roobol
Journal:  Eur Urol       Date:  2018-11-09       Impact factor: 20.096

3.  Active Surveillance of Grade Group 1 Prostate Cancer: Long-term Outcomes from a Large Prospective Cohort.

Authors:  Jeffrey J Tosoian; Mufaddal Mamawala; Jonathan I Epstein; Patricia Landis; Katarzyna J Macura; Demetrios N Simopoulos; H Ballentine Carter; Michael A Gorin
Journal:  Eur Urol       Date:  2020-01-07       Impact factor: 20.096

4.  Cost-effectiveness of prostate cancer screening: a simulation study based on ERSPC data.

Authors:  E A M Heijnsdijk; T M de Carvalho; A Auvinen; M Zappa; V Nelen; M Kwiatkowski; A Villers; A Páez; S M Moss; T L J Tammela; F Recker; L Denis; S V Carlsson; E M Wever; C H Bangma; F H Schröder; M J Roobol; J Hugosson; H J de Koning
Journal:  J Natl Cancer Inst       Date:  2014-12-13       Impact factor: 13.506

Review 5.  EAU-EANM-ESTRO-ESUR-SIOG Guidelines on Prostate Cancer-2020 Update. Part 1: Screening, Diagnosis, and Local Treatment with Curative Intent.

Authors:  Nicolas Mottet; Roderick C N van den Bergh; Erik Briers; Thomas Van den Broeck; Marcus G Cumberbatch; Maria De Santis; Stefano Fanti; Nicola Fossati; Giorgio Gandaglia; Silke Gillessen; Nikos Grivas; Jeremy Grummet; Ann M Henry; Theodorus H van der Kwast; Thomas B Lam; Michael Lardas; Matthew Liew; Malcolm D Mason; Lisa Moris; Daniela E Oprea-Lager; Henk G van der Poel; Olivier Rouvière; Ivo G Schoots; Derya Tilki; Thomas Wiegel; Peter-Paul M Willemse; Philip Cornford
Journal:  Eur Urol       Date:  2020-11-07       Impact factor: 20.096

Review 6.  Financial Toxicity Among Patients with Prostate, Bladder, and Kidney Cancer: A Systematic Review and Call to Action.

Authors:  Sumeet K Bhanvadia; Sarah P Psutka; Madeleine L Burg; Ronald de Wit; Haryana M Dhillon; Bishal Gyawali; Alicia K Morgans; Daniel A Goldstein; Angela B Smith; Maxine Sun; David F Penson
Journal:  Eur Urol Oncol       Date:  2021-04-02

7.  Interim Results from the IMPACT Study: Evidence for Prostate-specific Antigen Screening in BRCA2 Mutation Carriers.

Authors:  Elizabeth C Page; Elizabeth K Bancroft; Mark N Brook; Melissa Assel; Mona Hassan Al Battat; Sarah Thomas; Natalie Taylor; Anthony Chamberlain; Jennifer Pope; Holly Ni Raghallaigh; D Gareth Evans; Jeanette Rothwell; Lovise Maehle; Eli Marie Grindedal; Paul James; Lyon Mascarenhas; Joanne McKinley; Lucy Side; Tessy Thomas; Christi van Asperen; Hans Vasen; Lambertus A Kiemeney; Janneke Ringelberg; Thomas Dyrsø Jensen; Palle J S Osther; Brian T Helfand; Elena Genova; Rogier A Oldenburg; Cezary Cybulski; Dominika Wokolorczyk; Kai-Ren Ong; Camilla Huber; Jimmy Lam; Louise Taylor; Monica Salinas; Lidia Feliubadaló; Jan C Oosterwijk; Wendy van Zelst-Stams; Jackie Cook; Derek J Rosario; Susan Domchek; Jacquelyn Powers; Saundra Buys; Karen O'Toole; Margreet G E M Ausems; Rita K Schmutzler; Kerstin Rhiem; Louise Izatt; Vishakha Tripathi; Manuel R Teixeira; Marta Cardoso; William D Foulkes; Armen Aprikian; Heleen van Randeraad; Rosemarie Davidson; Mark Longmuir; Mariëlle W G Ruijs; Apollonia T J M Helderman van den Enden; Muriel Adank; Rachel Williams; Lesley Andrews; Declan G Murphy; Dorothy Halliday; Lisa Walker; Annelie Liljegren; Stefan Carlsson; Ashraf Azzabi; Irene Jobson; Catherine Morton; Kylie Shackleton; Katie Snape; Helen Hanson; Marion Harris; Marc Tischkowitz; Amy Taylor; Judy Kirk; Rachel Susman; Rakefet Chen-Shtoyerman; Allan Spigelman; Nicholas Pachter; Munaza Ahmed; Teresa Ramon Y Cajal; Janez Zgajnar; Carole Brewer; Neus Gadea; Angela F Brady; Theo van Os; David Gallagher; Oskar Johannsson; Alan Donaldson; Julian Barwell; Nicola Nicolai; Eitan Friedman; Elias Obeid; Lynn Greenhalgh; Vedang Murthy; Lucia Copakova; Sibel Saya; John McGrath; Peter Cooke; Karina Rønlund; Kate Richardson; Alex Henderson; Soo H Teo; Banu Arun; Karin Kast; Alexander Dias; Neil K Aaronson; Audrey Ardern-Jones; Chris H Bangma; Elena Castro; David Dearnaley; Diana M Eccles; Karen Tricker; Jorunn Eyfjord; Alison Falconer; Christopher Foster; Henrik Gronberg; Freddie C Hamdy; Vigdis Stefansdottir; Vincent Khoo; Geoffrey J Lindeman; Jan Lubinski; Karol Axcrona; Christos Mikropoulos; Anita Mitra; Clare Moynihan; Gadi Rennert; Mohnish Suri; Penny Wilson; Tim Dudderidge; Judith Offman; Zsofia Kote-Jarai; Andrew Vickers; Hans Lilja; Rosalind A Eeles
Journal:  Eur Urol       Date:  2019-09-16       Impact factor: 20.096

8.  KLK3 SNP-SNP interactions for prediction of prostate cancer aggressiveness.

Authors:  Hui-Yi Lin; Po-Yu Huang; Chia-Ho Cheng; Heng-Yuan Tung; Zhide Fang; Anders E Berglund; Ann Chen; Jennifer French-Kwawu; Darian Harris; Julio Pow-Sang; Kosj Yamoah; John L Cleveland; Shivanshu Awasthi; Robert J Rounbehler; Travis Gerke; Jasreman Dhillon; Rosalind Eeles; Zsofia Kote-Jarai; Kenneth Muir; Johanna Schleutker; Nora Pashayan; David E Neal; Sune F Nielsen; Børge G Nordestgaard; Henrik Gronberg; Fredrik Wiklund; Graham G Giles; Christopher A Haiman; Ruth C Travis; Janet L Stanford; Adam S Kibel; Cezary Cybulski; Kay-Tee Khaw; Christiane Maier; Stephen N Thibodeau; Manuel R Teixeira; Lisa Cannon-Albright; Hermann Brenner; Radka Kaneva; Hardev Pandha; Srilakshmi Srinivasan; Judith Clements; Jyotsna Batra; Jong Y Park
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2021-04-29       Impact factor: 4.379

9.  A prospective prostate cancer screening programme for men with pathogenic variants in mismatch repair genes (IMPACT): initial results from an international prospective study.

Authors:  Elizabeth K Bancroft; Elizabeth C Page; Mark N Brook; Sarah Thomas; Natalie Taylor; Jennifer Pope; Jana McHugh; Ann-Britt Jones; Questa Karlsson; Susan Merson; Kai Ren Ong; Jonathan Hoffman; Camilla Huber; Lovise Maehle; Eli Marie Grindedal; Astrid Stormorken; D Gareth Evans; Jeanette Rothwell; Fiona Lalloo; Angela F Brady; Marion Bartlett; Katie Snape; Helen Hanson; Paul James; Joanne McKinley; Lyon Mascarenhas; Sapna Syngal; Chinedu Ukaegbu; Lucy Side; Tessy Thomas; Julian Barwell; Manuel R Teixeira; Louise Izatt; Mohnish Suri; Finlay A Macrae; Nicola Poplawski; Rakefet Chen-Shtoyerman; Munaza Ahmed; Hannah Musgrave; Nicola Nicolai; Lynn Greenhalgh; Carole Brewer; Nicholas Pachter; Allan D Spigelman; Ashraf Azzabi; Brian T Helfand; Dorothy Halliday; Saundra Buys; Teresa Ramon Y Cajal; Alan Donaldson; Kathleen A Cooney; Marion Harris; John McGrath; Rosemarie Davidson; Amy Taylor; Peter Cooke; Kathryn Myhill; Matthew Hogben; Neil K Aaronson; Audrey Ardern-Jones; Chris H Bangma; Elena Castro; David Dearnaley; Alexander Dias; Tim Dudderidge; Diana M Eccles; Kate Green; Jorunn Eyfjord; Alison Falconer; Christopher S Foster; Henrik Gronberg; Freddie C Hamdy; Oskar Johannsson; Vincent Khoo; Hans Lilja; Geoffrey J Lindeman; Jan Lubinski; Karol Axcrona; Christos Mikropoulos; Anita V Mitra; Clare Moynihan; Holly Ni Raghallaigh; Gad Rennert; Rebecca Collier; Judith Offman; Zsofia Kote-Jarai; Rosalind A Eeles
Journal:  Lancet Oncol       Date:  2021-10-19       Impact factor: 54.433

10.  The ProtecT trial: analysis of the patient cohort, baseline risk stratification and disease progression.

Authors:  Richard J Bryant; Jon Oxley; Grace J Young; Janet A Lane; Chris Metcalfe; Michael Davis; Emma L Turner; Richard M Martin; John R Goepel; Murali Varma; David F Griffiths; Ken Grigor; Nick Mayer; Anne Y Warren; Selina Bhattarai; John Dormer; Malcolm Mason; John Staffurth; Eleanor Walsh; Derek J Rosario; James W F Catto; David E Neal; Jenny L Donovan; Freddie C Hamdy
Journal:  BJU Int       Date:  2020-02-12       Impact factor: 5.588

  10 in total

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