The role of adjuvant hormonal treatment after surgery for localized high-risk prostate cancer: results of a matched multiinstitutional analysis.

  • Maria Schubert
  • Steven Joniau
  • Paolo Gontero
  • Susanne Kneitz
  • Claus-Jürgen Scholz
  • Burkhard Kneitz
  • Alberto Briganti
  • R Jeffrey Karnes
  • Bertrand Tombal
  • Jochen Walz
  • Chao-Yu Hsu
  • Giansilvio Marchioro
  • Pia Bader
  • Chris Bangma
  • Detlef Frohneberg
  • Markus Graefen
  • Fritz Schröder
  • Paul van Cangh
  • Hein van Poppel
  • Martin Spahn

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Abstract

Introduction. To assess the role of adjuvant androgen deprivation therapy (ADT) in high-risk prostate cancer patients (PCa) after surgery. Materials and Methods. The analysis case matched 172 high-risk PCa patients with positive section margins or non-organ confined disease and negative lymph nodes to receive adjuvant ADT (group 1, n = 86) or no adjuvant ADT (group 2, n = 86). Results. Only 11.6% of the patients died, 2.3% PCa related. Estimated 5-10-year clinical progression-free survival was 96.9% (94.3%) for group 1 and 73.7% (67.0%) for group 2, respectively. Subgroup analysis identified men with T2/T3a tumors at low-risk and T3b margins positive disease at higher risk for progression. Conclusion. Patients with T2/T3a tumors are at low-risk for metastatic disease and cancer-related death and do not need adjuvant ADT. We identified men with T3b margin positive disease at highest risk for clinical progression. These patients benefit from immediate adjuvant ADT.

Bibliographical data

Original languageEnglish
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2012
pubmed 22400018