4.6 Article

Is the Toxicity of Salvage Prostatectomy Related to the Primary Prostate Cancer Therapy Received?

Journal

JOURNAL OF UROLOGY
Volume 205, Issue 3, Pages 791-797

Publisher

LIPPINCOTT WILLIAMS & WILKINS
DOI: 10.1097/JU.0000000000001382

Keywords

prostatic neoplasms; neoplasm recurrence, local; prostatectomy; outcome assessment, health care; quality of health care

Funding

  1. Sonacare
  2. Sophiris Biocorp
  3. Steba Biotech
  4. Trod Medical
  5. Immodulon

Ask authors/readers for more resources

This study compared salvage radical prostatectomy after focal therapy with salvage radical prostatectomy after radiation therapy, finding that patients undergoing radiation therapy had higher complication rates, lower continence rates, and higher positive margin rates.
Purpose: To compare the toxicity profile and oncological outcome of salvage radical prostatectomy following focal therapy versus salvage radical prostatectomy after radiation therapies (external beam radiation therapy or brachytherapy). Materials and methods: Data concerning all men undergoing salvage radical prostatectomy for recurrent prostate cancer after either focal therapy, external beam radiation therapy or brachytherapy were retrospectively collected from 4 high volume surgical centers. The primary outcome measure of the study was toxicity of salvage radical prostatectomy characterized by any 30-day postoperative Clavien-Dindo complication rate, 12-month continence rate and 12-month potency rate. The secondary outcome was oncological outcome after salvage radical prostatectomy including positive margin rate and 12-month biochemical recurrence rate. Biochemical recurrence was estimated using Kaplan-Meier methods and significant differences were calculated using a log rank test. Median followup was 29.5 months. Results: Between April 2007 and September 2018, 185 patients underwent salvage radical prostatectomy of whom 95 had salvage radical prostatectomy after focal therapy and 90 had salvage radical prostatectomy after radiation therapy (external beam radiation therapy or brachytherapy). Salvage radical prostatectomy after radiation therapy was associated with a significantly higher 30-day Clavien-Dindo I-IV complication rate (34% vs 5%, p <0.001). At 12 months following surgery, patients undergoing salvage radical prostatectomy after focal therapy had significantly better continence (83% pad-free vs 49%) while potency outcomes were similar (14% vs 11%). Men undergoing salvage radical prostatectomy after radiation therapy had a significantly higher stage and grade of disease together with a higher positive surgical margin rate (37% vs 13%, p=0.001). The 3-year biochemical recurrence after focal therapy was 35% compared to 32% after radiation therapy (p=0.76). In multivariable analysis, men undergoing salvage radical prostatectomy after focal therapy experienced a higher risk of biochemical recurrence (HR 0.36, 95% CI 0.16-0.82, p=0.02). Conclusions: This multicenter study demonstrates the toxicity of salvage radical prostatectomy in terms of perioperative complications and long-term urinary continence recovery is dependent on initial primary prostate cancer therapy received with men undergoing salvage radical prostatectomy after focal therapy experiencing lower postoperative complication rates and better urinary continence outcomes.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.6
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available