Primary radiotherapy vs conservative management for localized prostate cancer[mdash]a population-based study
Menée à partir de données portant sur 57 749 patients atteints d'un cancer de la prostate de stade T1-T2 diagnostiqué entre 1992 et 2007, cette étude évalue, en fonction de l'agressivité de la maladie et du point de vue de la survie spécifique et de la survie globale à 10 ans, l'efficacité d'une radiothérapie en traitement de première ligne
Résumé en anglais
Background : Radiotherapy is the most common curative cancer therapy used for elderly patients with localized prostate cancer. However, the effectiveness of this approach has not been established. The purpose of this study is to evaluate the long-term outcomes of primary radiotherapy compared with conservative management in order to facilitate treatment decisions.
Method : This population-based study consisted of 57 749 patients with T1–T2 prostate cancers diagnosed during 1992–2007. We utilized an instrumental variable (IV) analytical approach with competing risk models to evaluate the outcomes of primary radiotherapy vs conservative management. The IV was comprised of combined health service areas with high- and low-use areas corresponding to the top and bottom tertile in radiotherapy usage rates.
Results : In patients with low-/intermediate-risk prostate cancer, 10-year prostate cancer-specific and overall survival was similar in high- and low-radiotherapy use areas (96.1 vs 95.4% and 56.6 vs 56.3%, respectively). In patients with high-risk disease, however, areas with high-radiotherapy use had a higher 10-year cancer-specific survival (90.2 vs 88.1%, difference 2.1%; 95% CI 0.3–4.0%) and 10-year overall survival (53.3 vs 50.2%, difference 3.1%; 95% CI 1.3–6.3%). Results were similar irrespective of the type of radiotherapy used. To assess the robustness of our choice of IV, we repeated the IV analytical approach using different IVs (using the median utilization rate as the cutoff) and found the results to be similar.
Conclusions : Among men >65 years of age, the benefit of primary radiotherapy for localized disease is largely confined to patients with high-risk prostate cancer (Gleason scores 7–10).