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Multi-institution analysis of racial disparity among African-American men eligible for prostate cancer active surveillance

There is a significant controversy on whether race should be a factor in considering active surveillance for low-risk prostate cancer. To address this question, we analyzed a multi-institution database to assess racial disparity between African-American and White-American men with low risk prostate...

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Autores principales: Dinizo, Michael, Shih, Weichung, Kwon, Young Suk, Eun, Daniel, Reese, Adam, Giusto, Laura, Trabulsi, Edouard J., Yuh, Bertram, Ruel, Nora, Marchalik, Daniel, Hwang, Jonathan, Kundu, Shilajit D., Eggener, Scott, Kim, Isaac Yi
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Impact Journals LLC 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5940363/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29765545
http://dx.doi.org/10.18632/oncotarget.25103
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author Dinizo, Michael
Shih, Weichung
Kwon, Young Suk
Eun, Daniel
Reese, Adam
Giusto, Laura
Trabulsi, Edouard J.
Yuh, Bertram
Ruel, Nora
Marchalik, Daniel
Hwang, Jonathan
Kundu, Shilajit D.
Eggener, Scott
Kim, Isaac Yi
author_facet Dinizo, Michael
Shih, Weichung
Kwon, Young Suk
Eun, Daniel
Reese, Adam
Giusto, Laura
Trabulsi, Edouard J.
Yuh, Bertram
Ruel, Nora
Marchalik, Daniel
Hwang, Jonathan
Kundu, Shilajit D.
Eggener, Scott
Kim, Isaac Yi
author_sort Dinizo, Michael
collection PubMed
description There is a significant controversy on whether race should be a factor in considering active surveillance for low-risk prostate cancer. To address this question, we analyzed a multi-institution database to assess racial disparity between African-American and White-American men with low risk prostate cancer who were eligible for active surveillance but underwent radical prostatectomy. A retrospective analysis of prospectively collected clinical, pathologic and oncologic outcomes of men with low-risk prostate cancer from seven tertiary care institutions that underwent radical prostatectomy from 2003–2014 were used to assess potential racial disparity. Of the 333 (14.8%) African-American and 1923 (85.2%) White-American men meeting active surveillance criteria, African-American men were found to be slightly younger (57.5 vs 58.5 years old; p = 0.01) and have higher BMI (29.3 v 27.9; p < 0.01), pre-op PSA (5.2 v 4.7; p < 0.01), and maximum percentage cancer on biopsy (15.1% v 13.6%; p < 0.01) compared to White-American men. Univariate and multivariate analysis demonstrated similar rates of upgrading, upstaging, positive surgical margin, and biochemical recurrence between races. These results suggest that single institution studies recommending more stringent AS enrollment criteria for AA men with a low-risk prostate cancer may not capture the complete oncologic landscape due to institutional variability in cancer outcomes. Since all seven institutions demonstrated no significant racial disparity, current active surveillance eligibility should not be modified based upon race until a prospective study has been completed.
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spelling pubmed-59403632018-05-15 Multi-institution analysis of racial disparity among African-American men eligible for prostate cancer active surveillance Dinizo, Michael Shih, Weichung Kwon, Young Suk Eun, Daniel Reese, Adam Giusto, Laura Trabulsi, Edouard J. Yuh, Bertram Ruel, Nora Marchalik, Daniel Hwang, Jonathan Kundu, Shilajit D. Eggener, Scott Kim, Isaac Yi Oncotarget Research Paper There is a significant controversy on whether race should be a factor in considering active surveillance for low-risk prostate cancer. To address this question, we analyzed a multi-institution database to assess racial disparity between African-American and White-American men with low risk prostate cancer who were eligible for active surveillance but underwent radical prostatectomy. A retrospective analysis of prospectively collected clinical, pathologic and oncologic outcomes of men with low-risk prostate cancer from seven tertiary care institutions that underwent radical prostatectomy from 2003–2014 were used to assess potential racial disparity. Of the 333 (14.8%) African-American and 1923 (85.2%) White-American men meeting active surveillance criteria, African-American men were found to be slightly younger (57.5 vs 58.5 years old; p = 0.01) and have higher BMI (29.3 v 27.9; p < 0.01), pre-op PSA (5.2 v 4.7; p < 0.01), and maximum percentage cancer on biopsy (15.1% v 13.6%; p < 0.01) compared to White-American men. Univariate and multivariate analysis demonstrated similar rates of upgrading, upstaging, positive surgical margin, and biochemical recurrence between races. These results suggest that single institution studies recommending more stringent AS enrollment criteria for AA men with a low-risk prostate cancer may not capture the complete oncologic landscape due to institutional variability in cancer outcomes. Since all seven institutions demonstrated no significant racial disparity, current active surveillance eligibility should not be modified based upon race until a prospective study has been completed. Impact Journals LLC 2018-04-20 /pmc/articles/PMC5940363/ /pubmed/29765545 http://dx.doi.org/10.18632/oncotarget.25103 Text en Copyright: © 2018 Dinizo et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License 3.0 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/) (CC BY 3.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Paper
Dinizo, Michael
Shih, Weichung
Kwon, Young Suk
Eun, Daniel
Reese, Adam
Giusto, Laura
Trabulsi, Edouard J.
Yuh, Bertram
Ruel, Nora
Marchalik, Daniel
Hwang, Jonathan
Kundu, Shilajit D.
Eggener, Scott
Kim, Isaac Yi
Multi-institution analysis of racial disparity among African-American men eligible for prostate cancer active surveillance
title Multi-institution analysis of racial disparity among African-American men eligible for prostate cancer active surveillance
title_full Multi-institution analysis of racial disparity among African-American men eligible for prostate cancer active surveillance
title_fullStr Multi-institution analysis of racial disparity among African-American men eligible for prostate cancer active surveillance
title_full_unstemmed Multi-institution analysis of racial disparity among African-American men eligible for prostate cancer active surveillance
title_short Multi-institution analysis of racial disparity among African-American men eligible for prostate cancer active surveillance
title_sort multi-institution analysis of racial disparity among african-american men eligible for prostate cancer active surveillance
topic Research Paper
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5940363/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29765545
http://dx.doi.org/10.18632/oncotarget.25103
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