Evolving Risk of Urinary Adverse Events Across Localized Prostate Cancer Treatments: A Propensity-weighted Analysis of Surveillance, Epidemiology and End Results-Medicare Data.

Journal: European Urology
Published:
Abstract

Prostate cancer treatments can cause long-term urinary adverse events (UAEs), but time-varying risks across treatments remain understudied. Using Surveillance, Epidemiology and End Results-Medicare data, we evaluated men aged ≥66 yr with localized prostate cancer treated with radical prostatectomy (RP), external beam radiotherapy (EBRT), brachytherapy (BT), EBRT + BT, RP + EBRT, or ablation between 2000 and 2017. The primary outcome was any UAE requiring a procedure, with follow-up from treatment initiation and censoring at disease progression. Kaplan-Meier analysis was used to estimate the UAE cumulative incidence and the propensity-weighted restricted mean survival time (RMST) to quantify mean UAE-free survival at 18 yr. The cohort included 166 581 patients: 40% received EBRT, 30% RP, 14% BT + EBRT, 12% BT, 3.1% RP + EBRT, and 1.7% ablation. Combined therapy carried the highest risk, with other modalities showing time-dependent changes. At 18 yr, the UAE risk was highest for RP + EBRT (41%), followed by BT + EBRT (35%), EBRT (29%), RP (23%), and BT (22%). Adjusted RMST to 18 yr was shortest for RP + EBRT (13.1 yr) and longest for BT (15.8 yr) and ablation (15.6 yr). In comparison to RP (15.1 yr), UAE-free survival was 2.0 yr shorter with RP + EBRT (RMST ratio 0.87; p < 0.001) and 0.2 yr shorter with EBRT + BT (RMST ratio 0.99; p < 0.001). The balance between oncologic efficacy and long-term urinary toxicity is key to treatment selection.

Authors
Kevin Li, Marvin Carlisle, Stephanie Jarosek, Hiren Patel, Anna Faris, Sean Elliott, Matthew Cooperberg, Peter Carroll, Benjamin Breyer
Relevant Conditions

Prostate Cancer, Prostatectomy