Cargando…

United in Fight against prOstate cancer (UFO) registry: first results from a large, multi‐centre, prospective, longitudinal cohort study of advanced prostate cancer in Asia

OBJECTIVES: To document the management of advanced prostate cancer including diagnosis, prognosis, treatment, and care, in real‐world practice in Asia using the United in Fight against prOstate cancer (UFO) registry. PATIENTS AND METHODS: We established a multi‐national, longitudinal, observational...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Uemura, Hirotsugu, Ye, Dingwei, Kanesvaran, Ravindran, Chiong, Edmund, Lojanapiwat, Bannakij, Pu, Yeong‐Shiau, Rawal, Sudhir Kumar, Abdul Razack, Azad Hassan, Zeng, Hao, Chung, Byung Ha, Md Yusoff, Noor Ashani, Ohyama, Chikara, Kim, Choung Soo, Leewansangtong, Sunai, Tsai, Yuh‐Shyan, Liu, Yanfang, Liu, Weiping, van Kooten Losio, Maximiliano, Asinas‐Tan, Marxengel
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7187217/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31868997
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/bju.14980
_version_ 1783527127504650240
author Uemura, Hirotsugu
Ye, Dingwei
Kanesvaran, Ravindran
Chiong, Edmund
Lojanapiwat, Bannakij
Pu, Yeong‐Shiau
Rawal, Sudhir Kumar
Abdul Razack, Azad Hassan
Zeng, Hao
Chung, Byung Ha
Md Yusoff, Noor Ashani
Ohyama, Chikara
Kim, Choung Soo
Leewansangtong, Sunai
Tsai, Yuh‐Shyan
Liu, Yanfang
Liu, Weiping
van Kooten Losio, Maximiliano
Asinas‐Tan, Marxengel
author_facet Uemura, Hirotsugu
Ye, Dingwei
Kanesvaran, Ravindran
Chiong, Edmund
Lojanapiwat, Bannakij
Pu, Yeong‐Shiau
Rawal, Sudhir Kumar
Abdul Razack, Azad Hassan
Zeng, Hao
Chung, Byung Ha
Md Yusoff, Noor Ashani
Ohyama, Chikara
Kim, Choung Soo
Leewansangtong, Sunai
Tsai, Yuh‐Shyan
Liu, Yanfang
Liu, Weiping
van Kooten Losio, Maximiliano
Asinas‐Tan, Marxengel
author_sort Uemura, Hirotsugu
collection PubMed
description OBJECTIVES: To document the management of advanced prostate cancer including diagnosis, prognosis, treatment, and care, in real‐world practice in Asia using the United in Fight against prOstate cancer (UFO) registry. PATIENTS AND METHODS: We established a multi‐national, longitudinal, observational registry of patients with prostate cancer presenting to participating tertiary care hospitals in eight Asian countries. A total of 3636 eligible patients with existing or newly diagnosed high‐risk localised prostate cancer (HRL), non‐metastatic biochemically recurrent prostate cancer (M0), or metastatic prostate cancer (M1), were consecutively enrolled and are being followed‐up for 5 years. Patient history, demographic and disease characteristics, treatment and treatment decisions, were collected at first prostate cancer diagnosis and at enrolment. Patient‐reported quality of life was prospectively assessed using the European Quality of Life‐five Dimensions, five Levels (EQ‐5D‐5L) and Functional Assessment of Cancer Therapy for Prostate Cancer questionnaires. In the present study, we report the first interim analysis of 2063 patients enrolled from study start (15 September 2015) until 18 May 2017. RESULTS: Of the 2063 enrolled patients, 357 (17%), 378 (19%), and 1328 (64%) had HRL, M0 or M1 prostate cancer, respectively. The mean age at first diagnosis was similar in each group, 56% of all patients had extracapsular extension of their tumour, 28% had regional lymph node metastasis, and 53% had distant metastases. At enrolment, 62% of patients had at least one co‐morbidity (mainly cardiovascular disease or diabetes), 91.8% of M1 patients had an Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group performance score of <2 and the mean EQ‐5D‐5L visual analogue score was 74.6–79.6 across cohorts. Treatment of M1 patients was primarily with combined androgen blockade (58%) or androgen‐deprivation therapy (either orchidectomy or luteinising hormone‐releasing hormone analogues) (32%). Decisions to start therapy were mainly driven by treatment guidelines and disease progression. Decision to discontinue therapy was most often due to disease progression (hormonal drug therapy) or completion of therapy (chemotherapy). CONCLUSION: In the UFO registry of advanced prostate cancer in Asia, regional differences exist in prostate cancer treatment patterns that will be explored more deeply during the follow‐up period; prospective follow‐up is ongoing. The UFO registry will provide valuable descriptive data on current disease characteristics and treatment landscape amongst patients with prostate cancer in Asia.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-7187217
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2020
publisher John Wiley and Sons Inc.
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-71872172020-04-28 United in Fight against prOstate cancer (UFO) registry: first results from a large, multi‐centre, prospective, longitudinal cohort study of advanced prostate cancer in Asia Uemura, Hirotsugu Ye, Dingwei Kanesvaran, Ravindran Chiong, Edmund Lojanapiwat, Bannakij Pu, Yeong‐Shiau Rawal, Sudhir Kumar Abdul Razack, Azad Hassan Zeng, Hao Chung, Byung Ha Md Yusoff, Noor Ashani Ohyama, Chikara Kim, Choung Soo Leewansangtong, Sunai Tsai, Yuh‐Shyan Liu, Yanfang Liu, Weiping van Kooten Losio, Maximiliano Asinas‐Tan, Marxengel BJU Int Urological Oncology OBJECTIVES: To document the management of advanced prostate cancer including diagnosis, prognosis, treatment, and care, in real‐world practice in Asia using the United in Fight against prOstate cancer (UFO) registry. PATIENTS AND METHODS: We established a multi‐national, longitudinal, observational registry of patients with prostate cancer presenting to participating tertiary care hospitals in eight Asian countries. A total of 3636 eligible patients with existing or newly diagnosed high‐risk localised prostate cancer (HRL), non‐metastatic biochemically recurrent prostate cancer (M0), or metastatic prostate cancer (M1), were consecutively enrolled and are being followed‐up for 5 years. Patient history, demographic and disease characteristics, treatment and treatment decisions, were collected at first prostate cancer diagnosis and at enrolment. Patient‐reported quality of life was prospectively assessed using the European Quality of Life‐five Dimensions, five Levels (EQ‐5D‐5L) and Functional Assessment of Cancer Therapy for Prostate Cancer questionnaires. In the present study, we report the first interim analysis of 2063 patients enrolled from study start (15 September 2015) until 18 May 2017. RESULTS: Of the 2063 enrolled patients, 357 (17%), 378 (19%), and 1328 (64%) had HRL, M0 or M1 prostate cancer, respectively. The mean age at first diagnosis was similar in each group, 56% of all patients had extracapsular extension of their tumour, 28% had regional lymph node metastasis, and 53% had distant metastases. At enrolment, 62% of patients had at least one co‐morbidity (mainly cardiovascular disease or diabetes), 91.8% of M1 patients had an Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group performance score of <2 and the mean EQ‐5D‐5L visual analogue score was 74.6–79.6 across cohorts. Treatment of M1 patients was primarily with combined androgen blockade (58%) or androgen‐deprivation therapy (either orchidectomy or luteinising hormone‐releasing hormone analogues) (32%). Decisions to start therapy were mainly driven by treatment guidelines and disease progression. Decision to discontinue therapy was most often due to disease progression (hormonal drug therapy) or completion of therapy (chemotherapy). CONCLUSION: In the UFO registry of advanced prostate cancer in Asia, regional differences exist in prostate cancer treatment patterns that will be explored more deeply during the follow‐up period; prospective follow‐up is ongoing. The UFO registry will provide valuable descriptive data on current disease characteristics and treatment landscape amongst patients with prostate cancer in Asia. John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2020-01-30 2020-04 /pmc/articles/PMC7187217/ /pubmed/31868997 http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/bju.14980 Text en © 2019 The Authors BJU International Published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of BJU International This is an open access article under the terms of the http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ License, which permits use and distribution in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited, the use is non‐commercial and no modifications or adaptations are made.
spellingShingle Urological Oncology
Uemura, Hirotsugu
Ye, Dingwei
Kanesvaran, Ravindran
Chiong, Edmund
Lojanapiwat, Bannakij
Pu, Yeong‐Shiau
Rawal, Sudhir Kumar
Abdul Razack, Azad Hassan
Zeng, Hao
Chung, Byung Ha
Md Yusoff, Noor Ashani
Ohyama, Chikara
Kim, Choung Soo
Leewansangtong, Sunai
Tsai, Yuh‐Shyan
Liu, Yanfang
Liu, Weiping
van Kooten Losio, Maximiliano
Asinas‐Tan, Marxengel
United in Fight against prOstate cancer (UFO) registry: first results from a large, multi‐centre, prospective, longitudinal cohort study of advanced prostate cancer in Asia
title United in Fight against prOstate cancer (UFO) registry: first results from a large, multi‐centre, prospective, longitudinal cohort study of advanced prostate cancer in Asia
title_full United in Fight against prOstate cancer (UFO) registry: first results from a large, multi‐centre, prospective, longitudinal cohort study of advanced prostate cancer in Asia
title_fullStr United in Fight against prOstate cancer (UFO) registry: first results from a large, multi‐centre, prospective, longitudinal cohort study of advanced prostate cancer in Asia
title_full_unstemmed United in Fight against prOstate cancer (UFO) registry: first results from a large, multi‐centre, prospective, longitudinal cohort study of advanced prostate cancer in Asia
title_short United in Fight against prOstate cancer (UFO) registry: first results from a large, multi‐centre, prospective, longitudinal cohort study of advanced prostate cancer in Asia
title_sort united in fight against prostate cancer (ufo) registry: first results from a large, multi‐centre, prospective, longitudinal cohort study of advanced prostate cancer in asia
topic Urological Oncology
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7187217/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31868997
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/bju.14980
work_keys_str_mv AT uemurahirotsugu unitedinfightagainstprostatecanceruforegistryfirstresultsfromalargemulticentreprospectivelongitudinalcohortstudyofadvancedprostatecancerinasia
AT yedingwei unitedinfightagainstprostatecanceruforegistryfirstresultsfromalargemulticentreprospectivelongitudinalcohortstudyofadvancedprostatecancerinasia
AT kanesvaranravindran unitedinfightagainstprostatecanceruforegistryfirstresultsfromalargemulticentreprospectivelongitudinalcohortstudyofadvancedprostatecancerinasia
AT chiongedmund unitedinfightagainstprostatecanceruforegistryfirstresultsfromalargemulticentreprospectivelongitudinalcohortstudyofadvancedprostatecancerinasia
AT lojanapiwatbannakij unitedinfightagainstprostatecanceruforegistryfirstresultsfromalargemulticentreprospectivelongitudinalcohortstudyofadvancedprostatecancerinasia
AT puyeongshiau unitedinfightagainstprostatecanceruforegistryfirstresultsfromalargemulticentreprospectivelongitudinalcohortstudyofadvancedprostatecancerinasia
AT rawalsudhirkumar unitedinfightagainstprostatecanceruforegistryfirstresultsfromalargemulticentreprospectivelongitudinalcohortstudyofadvancedprostatecancerinasia
AT abdulrazackazadhassan unitedinfightagainstprostatecanceruforegistryfirstresultsfromalargemulticentreprospectivelongitudinalcohortstudyofadvancedprostatecancerinasia
AT zenghao unitedinfightagainstprostatecanceruforegistryfirstresultsfromalargemulticentreprospectivelongitudinalcohortstudyofadvancedprostatecancerinasia
AT chungbyungha unitedinfightagainstprostatecanceruforegistryfirstresultsfromalargemulticentreprospectivelongitudinalcohortstudyofadvancedprostatecancerinasia
AT mdyusoffnoorashani unitedinfightagainstprostatecanceruforegistryfirstresultsfromalargemulticentreprospectivelongitudinalcohortstudyofadvancedprostatecancerinasia
AT ohyamachikara unitedinfightagainstprostatecanceruforegistryfirstresultsfromalargemulticentreprospectivelongitudinalcohortstudyofadvancedprostatecancerinasia
AT kimchoungsoo unitedinfightagainstprostatecanceruforegistryfirstresultsfromalargemulticentreprospectivelongitudinalcohortstudyofadvancedprostatecancerinasia
AT leewansangtongsunai unitedinfightagainstprostatecanceruforegistryfirstresultsfromalargemulticentreprospectivelongitudinalcohortstudyofadvancedprostatecancerinasia
AT tsaiyuhshyan unitedinfightagainstprostatecanceruforegistryfirstresultsfromalargemulticentreprospectivelongitudinalcohortstudyofadvancedprostatecancerinasia
AT liuyanfang unitedinfightagainstprostatecanceruforegistryfirstresultsfromalargemulticentreprospectivelongitudinalcohortstudyofadvancedprostatecancerinasia
AT liuweiping unitedinfightagainstprostatecanceruforegistryfirstresultsfromalargemulticentreprospectivelongitudinalcohortstudyofadvancedprostatecancerinasia
AT vankootenlosiomaximiliano unitedinfightagainstprostatecanceruforegistryfirstresultsfromalargemulticentreprospectivelongitudinalcohortstudyofadvancedprostatecancerinasia
AT asinastanmarxengel unitedinfightagainstprostatecanceruforegistryfirstresultsfromalargemulticentreprospectivelongitudinalcohortstudyofadvancedprostatecancerinasia