Features and management of men with pN1 cM0 prostate cancer after radical prostatectomy and lymphadenectomy: a systematic review of population-based evidence.

Details

Serval ID
serval:BIB_3B4E3EF406EC
Type
Article: article from journal or magazin.
Collection
Publications
Institution
Title
Features and management of men with pN1 cM0 prostate cancer after radical prostatectomy and lymphadenectomy: a systematic review of population-based evidence.
Journal
Current opinion in urology
Author(s)
Laine C., Gandaglia G., Valerio M., Heidegger I., Tsaur I., Olivier J., Ceci F., van den Bergh RCN, Kretschmer A., Thibault C., Chiu P.K., Tilki D., Kasivisvanathan V., Preisser F., Zattoni F., Fankhauser C., Kesch C., Puche-Sanz I., Moschini M., Pradere B., Ploussard G., Marra G.
Working group(s)
EAU-YAU Prostate Cancer Working Party
ISSN
1473-6586 (Electronic)
ISSN-L
0963-0643
Publication state
Published
Issued date
01/01/2022
Peer-reviewed
Oui
Volume
32
Number
1
Pages
69-84
Language
english
Notes
Publication types: Journal Article
Publication Status: ppublish
Abstract
To investigate the features and optimal management of pN+ cM0 prostate cancer (PCa) according to registry-based studies.
Up to 15% of PCa patients harbor lymph node invasion (pN+) at radical prostatectomy plus lymph node dissection. Nonetheless, the optimal management strategy in this setting is not well characterized.
We performed a systematic review including n = 13 studies. Management strategies comprised 13 536 men undergoing observation, 11 149 adjuvant androgen deprivation therapy (aADT), 7,075 adjuvant radiotherapy (aRT) +aADT and 705 aRT. Baseline features showed aggressive PCa in the majority of men. At a median follow-up ranging 48-134months, Cancer-related death was 5% and overall-mortality 16.6%. aADT and aRT alone had no cancer-specific survival or overall survival advantages over observation only and over not performing aRT, respectively. aADT plus aRT yielded a survival benefit compared to observation and aADT, which in one study, were limited to certain intermediate-risk categories. Age, Gleason, Charlson score, positive surgical margins, pathological stage, and positive nodes number, but not prostate specific antigen, were most relevant prognostic factors. Our work further confirmed pN+ PCa is a multifaceted disease and will help future research in defining its optimal management based on different risk categories to maximize survival and patient's quality of life.
Pubmed
Web of science
Create date
03/12/2021 18:16
Last modification date
07/08/2022 6:36
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