Quantifying the Relationship Between Increasing Life Expectancy and Nonprostate Cancer Mortality After Radical Prostatectomy - 21/07/20
, Rainer Koch 2, Matthias Hübler 3, Marcus Lindner 2, Manfred P. Wirth 2, Christian Thomas 2Second revision, Ms. No. URL-D-19-02437
Abstract |
OBJECTIVE |
To investigate the relationship between increasing life expectancy and nonprostate cancer (competing) mortality after radical prostatectomy.
PATIENTS AND METHODS |
We studied a single-center sample of 6809 consecutive patients who underwent radical prostatectomy between 1992 and 2016 with a median age of 65 years and a median follow-up of 7.9 years. Multivariate competing risk analyses were performed with competing mortality as endpoint. Linear trends over the years of surgery for 5-year competing mortality rates and for mean ages were calculated using linear regression analyses. We estimated the number of live years gained over time using a heuristic model-based calculation: (hazard ratio year of surgery) 24 calendar years × (hazard ratio age at surgery) gained life years = 1.
RESULTS |
After controlling for age, nonprostate cancer mortality decreased significantly during the observation period. Accumulated over the 24 years, this decrease of mortality corresponded to the effect of 6.3 years of calendric age. Most of the decrease in nonprostate cancer mortality (predominantly attributable to noncancer causes of death) was seen in patients aged 65 years or older (8.1 years gained), whereas there was only a marginal decrease in patients younger than 65 years (only 1 year gained). The decrease in nonprostate cancer mortality was accompanied by a slight increase of mean age at surgery (2.7 years) that did not nearly compensate the decreasing risk.
CONCLUSION |
Clinicians should be aware of the decreasing competing mortality risk in elderly candidates for radical prostatectomy in order to avoid undertreatment.
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Vol 142
P. 174-178 - août 2020 Retour au numéroBienvenue sur EM-consulte, la référence des professionnels de santé.
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