4.6 Article

25-year prostate cancer control and survival outcomes: A 40-year radical prostatectomy single institution series

期刊

JOURNAL OF UROLOGY
卷 176, 期 2, 页码 569-574

出版社

LIPPINCOTT WILLIAMS & WILKINS
DOI: 10.1016/j.juro.2006.03.094

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prostatic neoplasms; prostatectomy; outcome assessment; survival analysis

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Purpose: We report on 25-year cancer control and survival outcomes after radical prostatectomy in a single center series of patients treated during a 40-year period. Materials and Methods: Between 1954 and 1994, 787 consecutive patients underwent radical prostatectomy at Virginia Mason Medical Center in Seattle, Washington. Kaplan-Meier 25-year probabilities of prostate cancer specific, overall, prostate specific antigen progression-free, local and distant progression-free survival were determined. Multivariate Cox regression models addressed prostate cancer specific mortality. Results: Prostate cancer specific survival, overall survival, prostate specific antigen progression-free survival, local and distant progression-free survival ranged from 99.0% to 81.5%, 93.5% to 19.3%, 84.8% to 54.5%, 95.3% to 87.8% and 95.9% to 78.2%, respectively. In univariate analyses pathological stage, surgical margin status, pathological Gleason sum, delivery of hormonal therapy and radiotherapy represented statistically significant predictors of prostate cancer specific mortality (all P <= 0.001). In multivariate analyses only Gleason sum (p = 0.03) and delivery of hormonal therapy (p < 0.001) remained significant. Conclusions: This is one of the most mature radical prostatectomy series. It demonstrates that long-term biochemical cancer control outcomes after radical prostatectomy might be suboptimal. However, local and distant control outcomes are excellent, and cancer specific mortality is minimal even 25 years after surgery.

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