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Definition and Impact on Oncologic Outcomes of Persistently Elevated Prostate-specific Antigen After Salvage Lymph Node Dissection for Node-only Recurrent Prostate Cancer After Radical Prostatectomy : Clinical Implications for Multimodal Therapy

Authors :
David Pfister
Francesco Barletta
Alessandro Nini
R. Jeffrey Karnes
Alexandre Mottrie
Andreas Hiester
Inderbir S. Gill
Shahrokh F. Shariat
Riccardo Schiavina
Matteo Droghetti
Nazareno Suardi
Axel Heidenreich
Alberto Briganti
Peter Albers
Carlo Andrea Bravi
Christian G. Stief
Nicola Fossati
Alexander Kretschmer
Bernhard Grubmüller
Gaëtan Devos
Steven Joniau
Francesco Montorsi
Markus Graefen
Vito Cucchiara
Alexander Buchner
Luca Boeri
Elio Mazzone
Hendrik Van Poppel
Klaus-Peter Juenemann
Pierre I. Karakiewicz
Derya Tilki
Daniar Osmonov
Giorgio Gandaglia
Simone Scuderi
Bravi, Carlo A
Droghetti, Matteo
Fossati, Nicola
Gandaglia, Giorgio
Suardi, Nazareno
Mazzone, Elio
Cucchiara, Vito
Scuderi, Simone
Barletta, Francesco
Schiavina, Riccardo
Osmonov, Daniar
Juenemann, Klaus-Peter
Boeri, Luca
Karnes, R Jeffrey
Kretschmer, Alexander
Buchner, Alexander
Stief, Christian
Hiester, Andrea
Nini, Alessandro
Albers, Peter
Devos, Gaëtan
Joniau, Steven
Van Poppel, Hendrik
Grubmüller, Bernhard
Shariat, Shahrokh F
Heidenreich, Axel
Pfister, David
Tilki, Derya
Graefen, Marku
Gill, Inderbir S
Mottrie, Alexandre
Karakiewicz, Pierre I
Montorsi, Francesco
Briganti, Alberto
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Universität des Saarlandes, 2022.

Abstract

Background: The optimal definition and prognostic significance of persistently elevated prostate-specific antigen (PSA) after salvage lymph node dissection (sLND) for node-only recurrent prostate cancer (PCa) remain unknown. Objective: To assess the definition and clinical implications of persistently elevated PSA after sLND for node-only recurrent PCa after radical prostatectomy. Design, setting, and participants: The study included 579 patients treated with sLND at 11 high-volume centers between 2000 and 2016. Outcome measurements and statistical analysis: We assessed the linear relationship between the first PSA after sLND and death from PCa. Different definitions of PSA persistence were included in a multivariable model predicting cancer-specific mortality (CSM) after surgery to identify the best cutoff value. We investigated the association between PSA persistence and oncologic outcomes using multivariable regression models. Moreover, the effect of early androgen deprivation therapy (ADT) after sLND was tested according to PSA persistence status and estimated risk of CSM. Results and limitations: We found an inverse relationship between the first PSA after sLND and the probability of cancer-specific survival. PSA persistence defined as first postoperative PSA ≥0.3 ng/ml provided the best discrimination accuracy (C index 0.757). According to this cutoff, 331 patients (57%) experienced PSA persistence. The median follow-up for survivors was 48 mo (interquartile range 27-74). After adjusting for confounders, men with persistently elevated PSA had higher risk of clinical recurrence (hazard ratio [HR] 1.61), overall mortality (HR 2.20), and CSM (HR 2.59; all p 10%. Conclusions: PSA persistence after sLND independently predicts adverse prognosis, with the best discrimination accuracy for CSM provided by a definition of PSA ≥ 0.3 ng/ml. We showed that when stratifying patients by final pathology results and PSA persistence status, early ADT use after sLND was beneficial only for patients with PSA persistence or with a calculated 5-yr risk of CSM of >10%, which could be useful as we await results from ongoing prospective trials. Patient summary: We found that for patients with prostate cancer who had lymph nodes removed after their cancer recurred, persistently elevated prostate-specific antigen (PSA) levels predict poorer prognosis. We showed that a PSA level of ≥0.3 ng/ml provides the best accuracy in identifying patients with worse prognosis. This may help to improve risk stratification after lymph node removal and allow physicians to optimize treatment strategies after surgery.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....1d2dfae261c1fd888b527fc024e4d962
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.22028/d291-37690