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Conventional radical versus focal treatment for localised prostate cancer: a propensity score weighted comparison of 6-year tumour control

Authors :
Marieke J, van Son
Max, Peters
Deepika, Reddy
Taimur T, Shah
Feargus, Hosking-Jervis
Stephen, Robinson
Jan J W, Lagendijk
Stephen, Mangar
Tim, Dudderidge
Stuart, McCracken
Richard G, Hindley
Amr, Emara
Raj, Nigam
Raj, Persad
Jaspal, Virdi
Henry, Lewi
Caroline, Moore
Clement, Orczyk
Mark, Emberton
Manit, Arya
Hashim U, Ahmed
Jochem R N, van der Voort van Zyp
Matt, Winkler
Alison, Falconer
Source :
Prostate cancer and prostatic diseases. 24(4)
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

For localised prostate cancer, focal therapy offers an organ-sparing alternative to radical treatments (radiotherapy or prostatectomy). Currently, there is no randomised comparative effectiveness data evaluating cancer control of both strategies.Following the eligibility criteria PSA 20 ng/mL, Gleason score ≤ 7 and T-stage ≤ T2c, we included 830 radical (440 radiotherapy, 390 prostatectomy) and 530 focal therapy (cryotherapy, high-intensity focused ultrasound or high-dose-rate brachytherapy) patients treated between 2005 and 2018 from multicentre registries in the Netherlands and the UK. A propensity score weighted (PSW) analysis was performed to compare failure-free survival (FFS), with failure defined as salvage treatment, metastatic disease, systemic treatment (androgen deprivation therapy or chemotherapy), or progression to watchful waiting. The secondary outcome was overall survival (OS). Median (IQR) follow-up in each cohort was 55 (28-83) and 62 (42-83) months, respectively.At baseline, radical patients had higher PSA (10.3 versus 7.9) and higher-grade disease (31% ISUP 3 versus 11%) compared to focal patients. After PSW, all covariates were balanced (SMD 0.1). 6-year weighted FFS was higher after radical therapy (80.3%, 95% CI 73.9-87.3) than after focal therapy (72.8%, 95% CI 66.8-79.8) although not statistically significant (p = 0.1). 6-year weighted OS was significantly lower after radical therapy (93.4%, 95% CI 90.1-95.2 versus 97.5%, 95% CI 94-99.9; p = 0.02). When compared in a three-way analysis, focal and LRP patients had a higher risk of treatment failure than EBRT patients (p 0.001), but EBRT patients had a higher risk of mortality than focal patients (p = 0.008).Within the limitations of a cohort-based analysis in which residual confounders are likely to exist, we found no clinically relevant difference in cancer control conferred by focal therapy compared to radical therapy at 6 years.

Details

ISSN :
14765608
Volume :
24
Issue :
4
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Prostate cancer and prostatic diseases
Accession number :
edsair.pmid..........492604eabbb83907c0913bfc2673da08