| Literature DB >> 35190441 |
Jinping Xu1, Michael Goodman2, James Janisse3, Michael L Cher4, Cathryn Hufford Bock5.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Active surveillance (AS) is recommended for men with low-risk prostate cancer (LRPC) to reduce overtreatment and to maintain patients' quality of life (QOL). However, whether African American (AA) men can safely undergo AS is controversial due to concerns of more aggressive disease and lack of empirical data on the safety and effectiveness of AS in this population. Withholding of AS may lead to a lost opportunity for improving survivorship in AA men. In this study, peer-reviewed and funded by the US Department of Defense, we will assess whether AS is an equally effective and safe management option for AA as it is for White men with LRPC. METHODS AND ANALYSIS: The project extends follow-up of a large contemporary population-based cohort of LRPC patients (n=1688) with a high proportion of AA men (~20%) and well-characterised baseline and 2-year follow-up data. The objectives are to (1) determine any racial differences in AS adherence, switch rate from AS to curative treatment and time to treatment over 5 years after diagnosis, (2) compare QOL among AS group and curative treatment group over time, overall and by race and (3) evaluate whether reasons for switching from AS to curative treatment differ by race. Validation of survey responses related to AS follow-up procedures is being conducted through medical record review. We expect to obtain 5-year survey from ~900 (~20% AA) men by the end of this study to have sufficient power. Descriptive and inferential statistical techniques will be used to examine racial differences in AS adherence, effectiveness and QOL. ETHICS AND DISSEMINATION: The parent and current studies were approved by the Institutional Review Boards at Wayne State University and Emory University. Since it is an observational study, ethical or safety risks are low. We will disseminate our findings to relevant conferences and peer-reviewed journals. © Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2022. Re-use permitted under CC BY-NC. No commercial re-use. See rights and permissions. Published by BMJ.Entities:
Keywords: adult radiotherapy; adult surgery; adult urology; mental health; quality in health care; urological tumours
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35190441 PMCID: PMC8860062 DOI: 10.1136/bmjopen-2021-056675
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ Open ISSN: 2044-6055 Impact factor: 2.692
Patient-reported measures and timeline
| Patient-reported measures | Baseline patient survey | 2-year patient survey | 5-year patient survey |
| Sociodemographics (eg, age, race/ethnicity, education, marital and employment status, income, insurance) | x | ||
| Family history of prostate cancer | x | ||
| Treatment chosen/received | x | x | x |
| Modified Charlson Comorbidity Index | x | ||
| General QOL (SF-12) | x | x | x |
| Prostate-specific QOL (EPIC-26) | x | x | x |
| Trust in Physician Scale | x | ||
| Perceived risk/severity of the cancer | x | x | x |
| Control Preference Scale | x | x | x |
| Decision Regret Scale | x | x | x |
| Decision Conflict Scale | x | ||
| Fear of Cancer scale | x | x | x |
| Understanding of treatment options | x | ||
| Information sources | x | ||
| Decision influencing factors (eg, treatment efficacy, side effects, burden) | x | x | x |
| Names of treating physician(s) | x | ||
| Beliefs/attitudes about AS | x | ||
| Health Literacy Scale | x |
AS, active surveillance; QOL, quality of life.
Baseline demographic characteristics by race (n=1688)
| Variable | White | Black | P value |
|
| 0.703 | ||
| Detroit | 738 (55.0) | 187 (53.9) | |
| Georgia | 603 (45.0) | 160 (46.1) | |
| <0.001 | |||
| WW | 15 (1.1) | 4 (1.2) | |
| AS | 790 (59.2) | 162 (47.9) | |
| Radiation | 194 (14.5) | 83 (24.6) | |
| Surgery | 314 (23.5) | 77 (22.8) | |
| Other | 20 (1.5) | 9 (2.7) | |
|
| 63.3±6.8 | 60.8±7.0 | <0.001 |
| <65 | 724 (54.0) | 229 (66.0) | <0.001 |
| ≥65 | 617 (46.0) | 118 (34.0) | |
|
| <0.001 | ||
| ≤High school | 192 (14.6) | 114 (33.6) | |
| Some college | 431 (32.8) | 134 (39.5) | |
| College graduate | 377 (28.7) | 55 (16.2) | |
| ≥Graduate | 313 (23.8) | 36 (10.6) | |
|
| <0.001 | ||
| < $70 000 | 470 (38.2) | 236 (74.7) | |
| ≥ $70 000 | 761 (61.8) | 80 (25.3) | |
|
| 0.8±1.1 | 1.1±1.3 | <0.001 |
| 0 | 653 (48.9) | 140 (40.8) | 0.004 |
| 1 | 422 (31.6) | 111 (32.4) | |
| 2+ | 260 (19.5) | 92 (26.8) | |
|
| <0.001 | ||
| Married/partnered | 1159 (86.9) | 212 (62.9) | |
| Not married/partnered | 174 (13.1) | 125 (37.1) | |
|
| <0.001 | ||
| Full/part time | 771 (57.8) | 146 (43.2) | |
| Unemployed | 562 (42.2) | 192 (56.8) |
AS, active surveillance; WW, watchful waiting.
Two-year demographic characteristics by race (n=1057)
| Variable | White | Black |
|
| ||
| Detroit | 512 (60.2) | 105 (50.7) |
| Georgia | 338 (39.8) | 102 (49.3) |
|
| ||
| WW | 6 (0.7) | 1 (0.5) |
| AS | 605 (71.2) | 98 (47.3) |
| Radiation | 104 (12.2) | 62 (30.0) |
| Surgery | 135 (15.9) | 45 (21.7) |
| Other | 0 (0) | 1 (0.5) |
|
| 63.3±6.7 | 61.1±6.5 |
| <65 | 462 (54.4) | 139 (67.1) |
| ≥65 | 388 (45.6) | 68 (32.9) |
|
| ||
| ≤High school | 94 (11.2) | 58 (28.0) |
| Some college | 269 (31.9) | 85 (41.1) |
| College graduate | 242 (28.7) | 38 (18.4) |
| ≥Graduate | 238 (28.2) | 26 (12.6) |
|
| ||
| < $70 000 | 261 (33.2) | 142 (72.8) |
| ≥ $70 000 | 525 (66.8) | 53 (27.2) |
|
| 0.8±1.1 | 1.1±1.3 |
| 0 | 411 (48.5) | 89 (43.0) |
| 1 | 270 (31.9) | 65 (31.4) |
| 2+ | 166 (19.6) | 53 (25.6) |
|
| ||
| Married/partnered | 741 (87.3) | 129 (62.6) |
| Not married/partnered | 108 (12.7) | 77 (37.4) |
|
| ||
| Full/part time | 483 (57.0) | 85 (41.7) |
| Unemployed | 465 (43.0) | 119 (58.3) |
AS, active surveillance; WW, watchful waiting.
Figure 1TOPCS conceptual model. AS, active surveillance; PSA, prostate-specific antigen; QOL, quality of life; SES, socioeconomic status; TOPCS, Treatment Options for Prostate Cancer Study.
Figure 2TOPCS sample flow chart for 2-year and 5-year follow-up studies. AS, active surveillance; QOL, quality of life; TOPCS, Treatment Options for Prostate Cancer Study; WW, watchful waiting.