Men who had the surgery were only slightly more likely to live
longer, but they were definitely more likely to be forced to live
with the side effects of surgery such as urinary incontinence and
erectile or sexual dysfunction.
For every 100 men diagnosed with early-stage prostate cancer who
underwent surgery, only four fewer died from the disease compared
with those who were just kept under observation and treated for
symptoms.
For every 100 men with low-risk disease who had a radical
prostatectomy, no more than one was saved by surgery, a
statistically insignificant difference, the researchers report in
the New England Journal of Medicine.
Yet 30 to 40 men out of 100 who had surgery experienced erectile
dysfunction within five years, 30 developed problems holding their
urine within 10 years and 20 to 40 reported dissatisfaction with
their ability to perform sexually.
The study, known as PIVOT, was designed to shed light on the ongoing
controversy over how best to treat prostate cancer, a tumor that is
diagnosed in 161,000 men in the U.S. each year but often fails to
kill them because the cancer grows so slowly they are more likely to
die from some other cause. Thus, many doctors simply recommend some
form of watchful waiting.
The cancer kills about 27,000 annually, according to the American
Cancer Society.
Because men today are being diagnosed earlier, with smaller tumors
than they were 20 years ago, any benefits of surgery are probably
even smaller than the study suggests, lead author Dr. Timothy Wilt
said in written comments to Reuters Health.
By the same token, "Men currently diagnosed with prostate cancer
will have even better long-term overall and prostate cancer survival
with observation than men enrolled in PIVOT," Wilt said.
The findings "reassure men with low-risk disease who have a life
expectancy greater than 10 years that active surveillance is safe
and offers better overall quality of life compared to radical
treatment," said Dr. Behfar Ehdaie of the Memorial Sloan-Kettering
Cancer Center in New York, who was not part of the study.
Some men with an intermediate risk may also be able to avoid surgery
as well, he told Reuters Health in an email.
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But Dr. Alexander Kutikov, chief of urologic oncology at the Fox
Chase Cancer Center in Philadelphia, who also was not connected with
the research, said the "quite controversial" study of 731 men, most
treated at Veterans Affairs hospitals, was too small to be
definitive and 20 percent of the men didn't stick with their
assigned treatment, muddying the results.
The study also falls short because the men were selected because
they were thought to have a life expectancy of 10 years, Kutikov
added. Yet at the 10-year mark nearly half had died. "Prostate
cancer treatment is an investment at least 10 years into the
future," he said by email. "Men with limited life-expectancy only
risk side effects of treatment and don't live long enough to reap
its benefits."
"A potential harm of observation is that prostate cancer may spread
if left untreated and could result in prostate cancer death," Wilt
acknowledged. "Fortunately for most men, this is very unlikely
(about 10 percent of men after 20 years) and was not different in
men treated with observation or surgery. Systemic progression and
prostate cancer death are rare (about 5 percent) in men with low
risk disease and are not decreased by surgery."
Only men at intermediate risk showed a benefit from surgery; where
survival was 14.5 percentage points higher. That translated to a 20
percent reduction in death from all causes.
With 731 men followed for a median of 12.7 years, PIVOT is one of
the longest and largest cancer studies ever conducted.
In the surgery group, 61.4 percent of the men died from all causes
and just 7.4 percent in the surgery group died from prostate cancer.
In the observation group, 66.8 percent died, 11.4 percent from
prostate cancer.
SOURCE: http://bit.ly/2u0BIwI New England Journal of Medicine,
online July 12, 2017.
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