Does Cytoreductive Prostatectomy Really Have an Impact on Prognosis in Prostate Cancer Patients with Low-volume Bone Metastasis?

  • Thomas Steuber
  • Kasper D Berg
  • Martin A Røder
  • Klaus Brasso
  • Peter Iversen
  • Hartwig Huland
  • Anne Tiebel
  • Thorsten Schlomm
  • Alexander Haese
  • Georg Salomon
  • Lars Budäus
  • Derya Tilki
  • Hans Heinzer
  • Markus Graefen
  • Philipp Mandel

Abstract

The impact of cytoreductive radical prostatectomy (CRP) on oncological outcomes in patients with prostate cancer (PCa) and distant metastases has been demonstrated by retrospective data with their potential selection bias. Using prospective institutional data, we compared the outcomes between 43 PCa patients with low-volume bone metastases (1-3 lesions) undergoing CRP (median follow-up 32.7 mo) and 40 patients receiving best systemic therapy (BST; median follow-up 82.2 mo). The inclusion criteria for both cohorts were identical. So far, no significant difference in castration resistant-free survival (p=0.92) or overall survival (p=0.25) has been detected. Compared to recent reports, the outcomes for our control group are more favorable, indicating a potential selection bias in the previous retrospective studies. Therefore, the unclear oncological effect has to be weighed against the potential risks of CRP. However, patients benefit from a significant reduction in locoregional complications (7.0% vs 35%; p<0.01) when undergoing CRP.

PATIENT SUMMARY: In this study we analyzed the impact of surgery in patients with prostate cancer and bone metastases. Using prospective data, we could not show a significant benefit of surgery on survival, but the rate of locoregional complications was lower. Therefore, patients should be treated within prospective trials evaluating the role of cytoreductive prostatectomy in low-volume, bone metastatic prostate cancer.

Bibliografische Daten

OriginalspracheEnglisch
ISSN2405-4569
DOIs
StatusVeröffentlicht - 12.2017
PubMed 28753877