WEDNESDAY, Feb. 13 (HealthDay News) -- One of the largest
studies of its kind concludes that most older men with early
prostate cancer do not shorten their survival odds if they adopt a
"wait-and-see" approach to the disease.
In fact, most such patients will die of other causes or they
simply won't develop any complications from the cancer, the
researchers found.
"Many elderly men with lower risk cancer may do well with
conservative management," concluded study author Grace Lu-Yau, a
cancer epidemiologist at the Cancer Institute of New Jersey, and an
associate professor at UMDNJ-Robert Wood Johnson Medical School and
School of Public Health.
"Each patient facing a treatment decision has to ask himself
what is the potential survival benefit of various treatments and
the potential side effects of various treatments, then compare this
potential risk of side effects with the potential risk of cancer
complications if the cancer is left untreated -- and ask themselves
which treatment option is their personal preference," Lu-Yau
said.
She presented the findings to reporters at a special
teleconference Tuesday, part of the 2008 Genitourinary Cancers
Symposium taking place in San Francisco.
The question of whether to treat or not treat prostate cancer
has long absorbed experts.
Although one in six men in the United States will be diagnosed
with prostate cancer in their lifetime, many of the malignancies
are slow-growing, and there is currently no reliable way to
identify which men will benefit from treatment. Better knowledge of
the natural history of the disease (i.e., what happens without any
treatment) would help guide treatment decisions, Lu-Yau said.
This study is one of the first to look at the natural history of
prostate cancer since PSA (prostate-specific antigen) blood testing
has become commonplace. PSA tests can detect a prostate cancer six
to 13 years earlier than previous methods.
Lu-Yau and her colleagues looked at data on more than 9,000 men
with Stage I or II prostate cancer diagnosed between 1992 and 2002
who did not undergo treatment. The mean age of participants was 77
years.
Seventy-two percent of these men died of other causes or didn't
have enough cancer progression to warrant surgery or radiation, the
researchers found. For the remaining 2,675 men who did receive
treatment, the median time between diagnosis and start of therapy
was more than 10 years.
Not surprisingly, men with less aggressive disease survived
longer than those with more aggressive tumors.
"For elderly men with localized prostate cancer, the potential
survival benefit for treatment is most likely modest, therefore it
is very critical to weigh the risk of having side effects of
various treatments with the risk of developing cancer-related
complications down the road," Lu-Yau said. "The majority of
patients will die of other causes or remain alive without
significant major complications."
A second study presented at the conference found that giving
salvage radiation therapy (SRT) to men whose PSA levels rise after
having their prostate removed can reduce their risk of dying from
the cancer by more than 60 percent.
SRT is typically given only after a recurrence, not after an
initial diagnosis of prostate cancer, noted study lead author Dr.
Bruce Trock, associate professor of urology, epidemiology, oncology
and environmental health sciences at Johns Hopkins University
School of Medicine in Baltimore. Existing studies have either not
been large enough or long enough in duration to determine if SRT
prolongs survival.
In this retrospective analysis of 635 men who had experienced a
recurrence after having their prostate removed, 62 percent of those
who did not receive any salvage therapy were still alive after 10
years, versus 86 percent of those who received SRT and 82 percent
of those who received SRT plus hormone therapy.
Men whose PSA doubling time (the amount of time it took for PSA
levels to double from when in first becomes detectable) was six
months or less had the greatest benefit.
"If another study was able to replicate our data, it could lead
to clinical trial that would eventually support a way to determine
who should get immediate adjuvant radiation and who could wait
until the time of recurrence to have SRT," Trock said. "The
question is, could a benefit be achieved in some of these men if
you waited to see whether they recurred or not?"
More information
There's more on prostate cancer at
U.S. National Cancer institute.