414 poster 3-D CT-guided monotherapeutic brachytherapy of localized prostate cancer in high and low risk patients: six-year followup

2001 ◽  
Vol 58 ◽  
pp. S108
2009 ◽  
Vol 27 (15_suppl) ◽  
pp. 5126-5126
Author(s):  
M. R. Cooperberg ◽  
J. M. Broering ◽  
P. R. Carroll

5126 Background: We aimed to characterize and quantify variation in the primary management of localized prostate cancer at the level of clinical practice sites. Methods: Data were abstracted from patients accrued to the CaPSURE national prostate cancer registry. Patients were accrued from the 36 clinical practice sites which contributed at least 30 patients to the registry, and represented all those diagnosed since 1990 with localized disease who received radical prostatectomy (RP), external beam radiation therapy (EBRT), brachytherapy, active surveillance / watchful waiting (WW), or primary androgen deprivation therapy (PADT) were included. Descriptive analyses were performed, and a random effects logit hierarchical model was constructed, controlling for year of diagnosis, age, comorbidity, PSA, Gleason score, clinical T stage, and percent of biopsy cores positive, to estimate the proportion of variation in primary treatment selection explicable by practice site. Analyses were conducted for all patients and for low-risk patients (Gleason score ≤6, PSA ≤10 ng/ml, clinical stage ≤T2a). Results: 10,080 men were analyzed. The distribution among primary treatments at each clinical practice site varied widely: use of RP, for example, ranged from 12% to 95% of enrolled patients. Patterns of treatment are not reliably explained by patient risk distribution at each site. The proportion of variation attributable to clinical practice sites was 10% for PADT, 19% for WW, 21% for EBRT, 28% for RP, 37% for brachytherapy, and 75% for cryotherapy. For low-risk patients only, this proportion was higher for all treatment types except brachytherapy and cryotherapy. Only a small amount of the variation attributable to practice site can be explained by measured sociodemographic factors such as ethnicity, income, education, and geographic region. There are significant trends in treatments over time, including more use of PADT for intermediate- and high-risk patients, and more use of RP and WW for low-risk patients. Conclusions: These data do not represent a random sampling of the United States population. However, the significant variation in practice patterns across individual clinical sites suggests that factors other than patient clinical and sociodemographic factors may be driving selection of primary treatment. [Table: see text]


2002 ◽  
Vol 53 (5) ◽  
pp. 1106-1110 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mark D Hurwitz ◽  
Lindsey Schnieder ◽  
Judith Manola ◽  
Clair J Beard ◽  
Irving D Kaplan ◽  
...  

2010 ◽  
Vol 77 (3) ◽  
pp. 784-787 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hendrik Isbarn ◽  
Pierre I. Karakiewicz ◽  
Susanne Vogel ◽  
Claudio Jeldres ◽  
Giovanni Lughezzani ◽  
...  

2012 ◽  
Vol 30 (15_suppl) ◽  
pp. e15164-e15164
Author(s):  
Hugh J. Lavery ◽  
Adam W. Levinson ◽  
Adrien Phalen ◽  
Nelson Stone ◽  
Richard Stock ◽  
...  

e15164 Background: Radical prostatectomy (RP) and radiotherapy (RT) provide comparable HRQOL and oncologic outcomes of localized prostate cancer (PCa), yet no studies have evaluated their relative costs when investigated by risk group. We evaluated hospital costs associated with modern PCa therapies at a multidisciplinary program. Methods: Institutional billing data was queried for hospital patients from 2005 to 2009 with a primary admission for prostate cancer and primary procedure codes for RP, brachytherapy (BT), intensity modulated RT (IMRT) or combination treatment. All hospital costs related to the primary procedure were analyzed as assigned by the hospital. Costs were adjusted to 2009 USD and analyzed per patient and pretreatment D’Amico risk group. Results: 1969 localized PCa patients with a median age of 62 were identified with complete clinical information. There was a marked increase in the use of robotic-assisted laparoscopic prostatectomy (RALP) starting in 2007. The median total hospital costs for IMRT monotherapy ($16,673), BT+IMRT ($22,145) and RP+ adjuvant IMRT ($24,380) combination therapies were significantly higher than any other treatment type, although these patients had worse pathologic features. BT was the least expensive treatment with a total cost of $7,506, but was not routinely used as monotherapy for high-risk patients. The total cost of RALP ($7,676) was lower than open radical prostatectomy (RRP) ($8,991, p<0.001) and similar to laparoscopic radical prostatectomy (LRP) ($7,769).These trendsremained consistent when stratified by risk group (Table). Conclusions: In a high volume setting, RALP and BT are the least expensive modalities for treating low and intermediate risk PCa. For high risk patients, all forms of RP and IMRT alone were less expensive than combination therapy. [Table: see text]


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