Contamination in control group led to no effect of PSA-based screening on prostate cancer mortality at 9 years follow-up: Results of the French section of European Randomized Study of Screening for Prostate Cancer (ERSPC)

2020 ◽  
Vol 30 (5) ◽  
pp. 252-260
Author(s):  
A. Villers ◽  
F. Bessaoud ◽  
B. Trétarre ◽  
P. Grosclaude ◽  
B. Malavaud ◽  
...  
Cancers ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 13 (12) ◽  
pp. 3064
Author(s):  
Jean-Emmanuel Bibault ◽  
Steven Hancock ◽  
Mark K. Buyyounouski ◽  
Hilary Bagshaw ◽  
John T. Leppert ◽  
...  

Prostate cancer treatment strategies are guided by risk-stratification. This stratification can be difficult in some patients with known comorbidities. New models are needed to guide strategies and determine which patients are at risk of prostate cancer mortality. This article presents a gradient-boosting model to predict the risk of prostate cancer mortality within 10 years after a cancer diagnosis, and to provide an interpretable prediction. This work uses prospective data from the PLCO Cancer Screening and selected patients who were diagnosed with prostate cancer. During follow-up, 8776 patients were diagnosed with prostate cancer. The dataset was randomly split into a training (n = 7021) and testing (n = 1755) dataset. Accuracy was 0.98 (±0.01), and the area under the receiver operating characteristic was 0.80 (±0.04). This model can be used to support informed decision-making in prostate cancer treatment. AI interpretability provides a novel understanding of the predictions to the users.


2021 ◽  
Vol 39 (6_suppl) ◽  
pp. 219-219
Author(s):  
Michael Austin Brooks ◽  
Lewis Thomas ◽  
Cristina Magi-Galluzi ◽  
Jianbo Li ◽  
Michael Crager ◽  
...  

219 Background: Adverse pathology (AP) at radical prostatectomy (RP) is often used as a proxy for long-term prostate cancer outcomes. The goal of this study was to assess the association of AP at RP, defined as high-grade (> Grade Group 3) and/or non-organ confined disease (pT3), with distant metastasis and prostate cancer death. Methods: A stratified cohort sample of 428 patients was used to evaluate the association of adverse pathology with the risk of distant metastases and prostate cancer-specific mortality over 20 years after prostatectomy in 2641 patients treated between 1987-2004. Cox regression of cause-specific hazards was used to estimate the absolute risk of both endpoints, with death from other causes treated as a competing risk. Subgroup analysis in patients with low/intermediate risk disease potentially eligible for active surveillance was performed. Results: Among the 428 patients, 343 had AUA Low or Intermediate risk disease and 85 had High risk disease. Median follow-up time was 15.5 years (IQR 14.6–16.6 years). Using the cohort sampling weights for estimation, at RP 29.8% of patients had high-grade disease, 42.3 % had non-organ confined disease, 19.3% had both, and thus 52.8% had AP. Adverse pathology was highly associated with metastasis and prostate cancer mortality in the overall cohort (HR 12.30, 95% CI 5.30-28.55, and 10.03, 95% CI 3.42-29.47, respectively, both p<0.001), and in the low/intermediate risk subgroup potentially eligible for active surveillance (HR 10.48, 95% CI 4.18-26.28, and 8.60, 95% CI 2.40-30.84, respectively, both p≤0.001). Conclusions: Adverse pathology at radical prostatectomy is highly associated with future development of metastasis and prostate cancer mortality and may be used as a short-term predictor of outcomes. [Table: see text]


Author(s):  
Philipp Dahm

This chapter provides a summary of the landmark Scandinavian Prostate Cancer Group Study Number 4 trial of men with clinically localized prostate cancer from the pre–prostate-specific antigen (PSA) era who were randomized to radical prostatectomy versus watchful waiting and were followed long term. With follow-up of more than 20 years, the results favored surgery with regard to prostate cancer mortality.


2008 ◽  
Vol 23 (11) ◽  
pp. 1809-1814 ◽  
Author(s):  
Grace Lu-Yao ◽  
Peter C. Albertsen ◽  
Janet L. Stanford ◽  
Therese A. Stukel ◽  
Elizabeth Walker-Corkery ◽  
...  

The Prostate ◽  
2004 ◽  
Vol 59 (3) ◽  
pp. 311-318 ◽  
Author(s):  
Fernand Labrie ◽  
Bernard Candas ◽  
Lionel Cusan ◽  
Jose Luis Gomez ◽  
Alain Bélanger ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
SD Walter ◽  
Jiarui Hu ◽  
Kirsi Talala ◽  
Teuvo Tammela ◽  
Kimmo Taari ◽  
...  

Abstract Purpose: Screening for prostate cancer may have limited impact on decreasing prostate cancer-related mortality. A major disadvantage is overdiagnosis, whereby lesions are identified that would not have become evident during the man’s lifetime if screening had not taken place. The present study aims to estimate the rate of overdiagnosis using Finnish data from the European randomized trial of prostate screening. Methods: We used data from 80,149 men randomized to a screening or a control group, distinguishing four birth cohorts. We used the “catch-up method” to identify when the difference in the cumulative incidence of prostate cancer between the screening and control groups had stabilised, implying that the screening has no further effect. We define the overdiagnosis rate to be the relative excess cumulative incidence in the screened group at that point. As an independent method, we also examined the diagnosis rates of T1c tumours as an indicator of early tumors detected by PSA. Results: The estimates of overdiagnosis rates from the catch-up method using the full period of available follow-up ranged between cohorts from 2.3% to 15.4%, and the T1c analysis gave very similar results. Conclusions: Some overdiagnosis has occurred, but there is uncertainty about its extent. A long follow-up is required to demonstrate the full impact of screening. We evaluated the overdiagnosis rates at a population level, associated with being offered screening, taking account of contamination (screening among the controls). The overall evaluation of screening should incorporate mortality benefit, cost-effectiveness and quality of life.


2005 ◽  
Vol 173 (4S) ◽  
pp. 146-146
Author(s):  
Georg C. Bartsch ◽  
Wolfgang Horninger ◽  
Wilhelm Oberaigner ◽  
Dieter Schönitzer ◽  
Helmut Klocker ◽  
...  

2018 ◽  
Vol 25 (2) ◽  
pp. 839-843 ◽  
Author(s):  
Tomi Pakarainen ◽  
Jaakko Nevalainen ◽  
Kirsi Talala ◽  
Kimmo Taari ◽  
Jani Raitanen ◽  
...  

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