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Trends and Outcome from Radical Therapy for Primary Non-Metastatic Prostate Cancer in a UK Population

BACKGROUND: Increasing proportions of men diagnosed with prostate cancer in the UK are presenting with non-metastatic disease. We investigated how treatment trends in this demographic have changed. PATIENT AND METHODS: Non-metastatic cancers diagnosed from 2000–2010 in the UK Anglian Cancer network...

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Autores principales: Greenberg, David C., Lophatananon, Artitaya, Wright, Karen A., Muir, Kenneth R., Gnanapragasam, Vincent J.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4351083/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25742020
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0119494
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author Greenberg, David C.
Lophatananon, Artitaya
Wright, Karen A.
Muir, Kenneth R.
Gnanapragasam, Vincent J.
author_facet Greenberg, David C.
Lophatananon, Artitaya
Wright, Karen A.
Muir, Kenneth R.
Gnanapragasam, Vincent J.
author_sort Greenberg, David C.
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Increasing proportions of men diagnosed with prostate cancer in the UK are presenting with non-metastatic disease. We investigated how treatment trends in this demographic have changed. PATIENT AND METHODS: Non-metastatic cancers diagnosed from 2000–2010 in the UK Anglian Cancer network stratified by age and risk group were analysed [n = 10,365]. Radiotherapy [RT] and prostatectomy [RP] cancer specific survival [CSS] were further compared [n = 4755]. RESULTS: Over the decade we observed a fall in uptake of primary androgen deprivation therapy but a rise in conservative management [CM] and radical therapy [p<0.0001]. CM in particular has become the primary management for low-risk disease by the decade end [p<0.0001]. In high-risk disease however both RP and RT uptake increased significantly but in an age dependent manner [p<0.0001]. Principally, increased RP in younger men and increased RT in men ≥ 70y. In multivariate analysis of radically treated men both high-risk disease [HR 8.0 [2.9–22.2], p<0.0001] and use of RT [HR 1.9 [1.0–3.3], p = 0.024] were significant predictors of a poorer CSM. In age-stratified analysis however, the trend to benefit of RP over RT was seen only in younger men [≤ 60 years] with high-risk disease [p = 0.07]. The numbers needed to treat by RP instead of RT to save one cancer death was 19 for this group but 67 for the overall cohort. CONCLUSION: This study has identified significant shifts in non-metastatic prostate cancer management over the last decade. Low-risk disease is now primarily managed by CM while high-risk disease is increasingly treated radically. Treatment of high-risk younger men by RP is supported by evidence of better CSM but this benefit is not evident in older men.
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spelling pubmed-43510832015-03-17 Trends and Outcome from Radical Therapy for Primary Non-Metastatic Prostate Cancer in a UK Population Greenberg, David C. Lophatananon, Artitaya Wright, Karen A. Muir, Kenneth R. Gnanapragasam, Vincent J. PLoS One Research Article BACKGROUND: Increasing proportions of men diagnosed with prostate cancer in the UK are presenting with non-metastatic disease. We investigated how treatment trends in this demographic have changed. PATIENT AND METHODS: Non-metastatic cancers diagnosed from 2000–2010 in the UK Anglian Cancer network stratified by age and risk group were analysed [n = 10,365]. Radiotherapy [RT] and prostatectomy [RP] cancer specific survival [CSS] were further compared [n = 4755]. RESULTS: Over the decade we observed a fall in uptake of primary androgen deprivation therapy but a rise in conservative management [CM] and radical therapy [p<0.0001]. CM in particular has become the primary management for low-risk disease by the decade end [p<0.0001]. In high-risk disease however both RP and RT uptake increased significantly but in an age dependent manner [p<0.0001]. Principally, increased RP in younger men and increased RT in men ≥ 70y. In multivariate analysis of radically treated men both high-risk disease [HR 8.0 [2.9–22.2], p<0.0001] and use of RT [HR 1.9 [1.0–3.3], p = 0.024] were significant predictors of a poorer CSM. In age-stratified analysis however, the trend to benefit of RP over RT was seen only in younger men [≤ 60 years] with high-risk disease [p = 0.07]. The numbers needed to treat by RP instead of RT to save one cancer death was 19 for this group but 67 for the overall cohort. CONCLUSION: This study has identified significant shifts in non-metastatic prostate cancer management over the last decade. Low-risk disease is now primarily managed by CM while high-risk disease is increasingly treated radically. Treatment of high-risk younger men by RP is supported by evidence of better CSM but this benefit is not evident in older men. Public Library of Science 2015-03-05 /pmc/articles/PMC4351083/ /pubmed/25742020 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0119494 Text en © 2015 Greenberg et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Greenberg, David C.
Lophatananon, Artitaya
Wright, Karen A.
Muir, Kenneth R.
Gnanapragasam, Vincent J.
Trends and Outcome from Radical Therapy for Primary Non-Metastatic Prostate Cancer in a UK Population
title Trends and Outcome from Radical Therapy for Primary Non-Metastatic Prostate Cancer in a UK Population
title_full Trends and Outcome from Radical Therapy for Primary Non-Metastatic Prostate Cancer in a UK Population
title_fullStr Trends and Outcome from Radical Therapy for Primary Non-Metastatic Prostate Cancer in a UK Population
title_full_unstemmed Trends and Outcome from Radical Therapy for Primary Non-Metastatic Prostate Cancer in a UK Population
title_short Trends and Outcome from Radical Therapy for Primary Non-Metastatic Prostate Cancer in a UK Population
title_sort trends and outcome from radical therapy for primary non-metastatic prostate cancer in a uk population
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4351083/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25742020
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0119494
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