4.3 Editorial Material

Active surveillance should not be routinely considered in ISUP grade group 2 prostate cancer

Journal

BMC UROLOGY
Volume 23, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s12894-023-01315-5

Keywords

Prostate cancer; Active surveillance; Intermediate risk; Radical prostatectomy; Recurrence

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The oncologic safety of active surveillance in patients with grade group 2 prostate cancer is debated. Surgery is associated with better disease control and survival compared to expectant management, and patients on active surveillance have a higher risk of disease progression and treatment.
Active surveillance has been proposed as a therapeutic option in selected intermediate risk patients with biopsy grade group 2 prostate cancer. However, its oncologic safety in this setting is debated. Therefore, we conducted a non-systematic literature research of contemporary surveillance protocols including patients with grade group 2 disease to collect the most recent evidence in this setting. Although no randomized controlled trial compared curative-intent treatments, namely radical prostatectomy and radiotherapy vs. active surveillance in patients with grade group 2 disease, surgery is associated with a benefit in terms of disease control and survival when compared to expectant management in the intermediate risk setting. Patients with grade group 2 on active surveillance were at higher risk of disease progression and treatment compared to their grade group 1 counterparts. Up to 50% of those patients were eventually treated at 5 years, and the metastases-free survival rate was as low as 85% at 15-years. When considering low- and intermediate risk patients treated with radical prostatectomy, grade group 2 was one of the strongest predictors of grade upgrading and adverse features. Available data is insufficient to support the oncologic safety of active surveillance in all men with grade group 2 prostate cancer. Therefore, those patients should be counselled regarding the oncologic efficacy of upfront active treatment modalities and the lack of robust long-term data supporting the safety of active surveillance in this setting.

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