June 17, 2011 — New data from the United Kingdom show that prostate cancer kills half of the men diagnosed with this disease, and challenge the notion that prostate cancer patients "are more likely to die with, rather than of, their disease," according to the researchers.
The situation is much different in the United States, where recent estimates suggest that only about 15% of men diagnosed with prostate cancer die from this disease.
The main reason for this huge difference is the high uptake of testing for prostate-specific antigen (PSA) in asymptomatic men in the United States, and the low uptake in the United Kingdom, say experts on both sides of the Atlantic.
Both situations are described as extreme by those on the other side. British researchers say that routine PSA testing in the United States is picking up disease that might be clinically insignificant, leading to overdiagnosis and overtreatment of prostate cancer. American researchers argue that PSA testing is picking up prostate cancer at an earlier stage of disease, when it is still treatable and curable, which results in the much lower mortality rates.
"If you are screening too aggressively, there is no question that you will overtreat, but the other end of the spectrum is that you have a cancer that is very curable but you still end up having half of the patients dying of the disease because they are presenting at late stages" said Brantley Thrasher, MD, FACS, professor of urology at the University of Kansas in Kansas City, who acts as a spokesperson for the American Urological Association.
"I would rather have the potential — and I emphasize the potential — for overtreating than swing the other way and lose all of these patients to a disease that is curable," Dr. Thrasher explained in an interview with Medscape Medical News.
New British Analysis
The new British data come from an analysis of 50,066 men diagnosed with prostate cancer between 1997 and 2006 from the Thames Cancer Registry, which covers a population of 12 million in South East England. Subjects were followed to the end of 2007.
During that period of time, there was little uptake of PSA testing in asymptomatic men in the United Kingdom.
The situation is different in the United States, where there is a high uptake of PSA testing, and has been for some time, lead researcher Simon Chowdhury, MD, consultant oncologist at Guy's and St Thomas' NHS Foundation Trust in London, United Kingdom, told Medscape Medical News.
Dr. Chowdhury presented the findings at the 2011 Meeting of United Kingdom Association of Cancer Registries and National Cancer Intelligence Network (NCIN), held in London.
The analysis found that prostate cancer was the cause of death in 49.7% of the men who had been diagnosed with the disease. The other causes of death were cardiovascular disease (17.8%), other cancers (11.8%), pneumonia (7.5%), and other causes (13.25%).
Prostate cancer remained an important cause of death even when the data were analyzed according to age, cancer stage, and first treatment, the researchers note.
Prostate cancer was the cause of death in 74.3% of men who had stage IV cancer at diagnosis, in 46.4% of all men 75 years and older, and in 31.6% of all men who underwent radical prostatectomy.
"Prostate cancer was the underlying cause of death in a substantial proportion of men," the researchers conclude, "and remained an important cause of death in all subgroups, including those treated with curative intent and older men."
"Our data show that a high proportion of men with prostate cancer die from the cancer," commented study author Henrik Møller, BA, BSc, MSc, DM, FFPH, professor of epidemiology at King's College London, and director of the Thames Cancer Registry. Dr. Møller, who is also head of analysis and research at the NCIN, added: "Our findings challenge the commonly-held view that most men with prostate cancer will die with the disease, rather than from it."
Setting of Low PSA Testing
The British researchers point out that their findings pertain to settings where there is a low uptake of PSA testing in asymptomatic men. In such a setting, "our findings challenge the notion that prostate cancer is a negligible problem in any subgroup, as defined by age, stage, or treatment," they note.
Dr. Chowdhury explained in an interview with Medscape Medical News that PSA testing was introduced in the United Kingdom in the early 1990s, but it is not routinely performed in asymptomatic men.
The situation is different in the United States, where there is a high uptake of PSA testing, with reports that more than 50% of men older than 65 years of age are tested, and many of the men tested are asymptomatic. This PSA testing in asymptomatic men might result in overdiagnosis and overtreatment of prostate cancer, Dr. Chowdhury said, because "some of the prostate cancers that are picked up are small and some may be clinically insignificant."
Dr. Chowdhury noted that the ratio of prostate cancer deaths to prostate cancer diagnoses is very different in the 2 regions — about 1 to 6.0 in the United States (based on estimates from the 2010 SEER database, showing a diagnosis in 215,000 men and 30,000 deaths) and about 1 to 3.7 in the United Kingdom (based on 2008 Cancer Research UK data, which show that there were 37,000 diagnoses and 10,100 deaths from prostate cancer).
There is a difference in the stage of prostate cancer at diagnosis — some American reports suggest that about 80% of the disease is localized, whereas in the United Kingdom, although most disease is also localized, there is a higher proportion of cancers diagnosed at an advanced stage, Dr. Chowdhury explained. Widespread PSA testing picks up prostate cancer at an earlier stage, which might be less aggressive and less clinically significant, he said.
"Not a Trivial Disease"
This is an extremely important study, which highlights the fact that prostate cancer is not a trivial disease for a large number of men in the United Kingdom who suffer from it," said Malcolm Mason, MD, head of oncology and palliative medicine at Cardiff University School of Medicine, United Kingdom. Dr. Mason is also chair of the UK National Cancer Research Institute's Prostate Cancer Clinical Studies Group, and was commenting in a statement issued by Cancer Research UK.Particularly for men with advanced prostate cancer, their disease poses a significant threat to their health and their life, and the old notion that 'most men die with it, not of it' is simply not true."
Since that study was carried out, there have been a number of important advances in treatment, Dr. Mason noted. "It is possible that not all of the men in this study who died of prostate cancer would die of it today with modern treatment," he said. In addition, many more men are diagnosed at a much earlier stage; for these men, the outlook is excellent, even without treatment, he added.
Need for Earlier Diagnosis and Treatment
Dr. Thrasher agreed with the conclusion that prostate cancer is not a trivial disease. "This study highlights the fact that prostate cancer can be a deadly disease," he said. "It speaks volumes about what happens when the cancer is advanced and out of the confines of the organ — it will kill you."
These data add weight to the argument for screening for prostate cancer, he said. They reinforce the need for earlier diagnosis and earlier treatment of the disease, and although the PSA test has its problems, it does result in both.
"There is no question that this is happening in the United States; we are finding and treating prostate cancer earlier," he said.
Dr. Thrasher cited 2010 estimates, from the Cancer Journal for Clinicians,that there were 217,000 new cases of prostate cancer diagnosed in the United States and 32,500 cancer deaths, which gives a mortality rate from the disease of 15%. In the United Kingdom, the rate is 50%.
There is a similar situation in Japan, he noted, where there is no routine PSA screening. Dr. Thrasher explained that he recently had the opportunity to talk to Japanese urologists during a joint meeting of the American and Japanese urological associations in Hawaii, and they were saying that by the time they see prostate cancer, it has often advanced to a stage where it is inoperable and not suitable for radiation.
Dr. Thrasher acknowledged that routine PSA testing can lead to the overdiagnosis and overtreatment of prostate cancer that might not be clinically significant. "We are starting to see some pullback as a result of this," he said, and although it is slow to gain ground in the United States, there is more use now of active surveillance as a treatment option, he told Medscape Medical News."We are starting to do this, especially in older men with low-grade, low-volume disease," he said. "However, right now, that is not mainline, and it is not a standard of care," he emphasized: "It is one option."
The very real benefit from PSA testing — finding prostate cancer at an earlier stage of disease, when it is still curable, which saves lives — has to be weighed against the potential for overdiagnosis and overtreatment, and the potential for anxiety from routine testing, he concluded. These latest data from the United Kingdom show that when there is no PSA testing, "you are losing about half your patients to the disease, and so it lends credibility toward leaning the other way," he said.
2011 Meeting of United Kingdom Association of Cancer Registries and National Cancer Intelligence Network (NCIN): Abstract 86. Presented June 16, 2011.
The situation is much different in the United States, where recent estimates suggest that only about 15% of men diagnosed with prostate cancer die from this disease.
The main reason for this huge difference is the high uptake of testing for prostate-specific antigen (PSA) in asymptomatic men in the United States, and the low uptake in the United Kingdom, say experts on both sides of the Atlantic.
Both situations are described as extreme by those on the other side. British researchers say that routine PSA testing in the United States is picking up disease that might be clinically insignificant, leading to overdiagnosis and overtreatment of prostate cancer. American researchers argue that PSA testing is picking up prostate cancer at an earlier stage of disease, when it is still treatable and curable, which results in the much lower mortality rates.
"If you are screening too aggressively, there is no question that you will overtreat, but the other end of the spectrum is that you have a cancer that is very curable but you still end up having half of the patients dying of the disease because they are presenting at late stages" said Brantley Thrasher, MD, FACS, professor of urology at the University of Kansas in Kansas City, who acts as a spokesperson for the American Urological Association.
"I would rather have the potential — and I emphasize the potential — for overtreating than swing the other way and lose all of these patients to a disease that is curable," Dr. Thrasher explained in an interview with Medscape Medical News.
New British Analysis
The new British data come from an analysis of 50,066 men diagnosed with prostate cancer between 1997 and 2006 from the Thames Cancer Registry, which covers a population of 12 million in South East England. Subjects were followed to the end of 2007.
During that period of time, there was little uptake of PSA testing in asymptomatic men in the United Kingdom.
The situation is different in the United States, where there is a high uptake of PSA testing, and has been for some time, lead researcher Simon Chowdhury, MD, consultant oncologist at Guy's and St Thomas' NHS Foundation Trust in London, United Kingdom, told Medscape Medical News.
Dr. Chowdhury presented the findings at the 2011 Meeting of United Kingdom Association of Cancer Registries and National Cancer Intelligence Network (NCIN), held in London.
The analysis found that prostate cancer was the cause of death in 49.7% of the men who had been diagnosed with the disease. The other causes of death were cardiovascular disease (17.8%), other cancers (11.8%), pneumonia (7.5%), and other causes (13.25%).
Prostate cancer remained an important cause of death even when the data were analyzed according to age, cancer stage, and first treatment, the researchers note.
Prostate cancer was the cause of death in 74.3% of men who had stage IV cancer at diagnosis, in 46.4% of all men 75 years and older, and in 31.6% of all men who underwent radical prostatectomy.
"Prostate cancer was the underlying cause of death in a substantial proportion of men," the researchers conclude, "and remained an important cause of death in all subgroups, including those treated with curative intent and older men."
"Our data show that a high proportion of men with prostate cancer die from the cancer," commented study author Henrik Møller, BA, BSc, MSc, DM, FFPH, professor of epidemiology at King's College London, and director of the Thames Cancer Registry. Dr. Møller, who is also head of analysis and research at the NCIN, added: "Our findings challenge the commonly-held view that most men with prostate cancer will die with the disease, rather than from it."
Setting of Low PSA Testing
The British researchers point out that their findings pertain to settings where there is a low uptake of PSA testing in asymptomatic men. In such a setting, "our findings challenge the notion that prostate cancer is a negligible problem in any subgroup, as defined by age, stage, or treatment," they note.
Dr. Chowdhury explained in an interview with Medscape Medical News that PSA testing was introduced in the United Kingdom in the early 1990s, but it is not routinely performed in asymptomatic men.
The situation is different in the United States, where there is a high uptake of PSA testing, with reports that more than 50% of men older than 65 years of age are tested, and many of the men tested are asymptomatic. This PSA testing in asymptomatic men might result in overdiagnosis and overtreatment of prostate cancer, Dr. Chowdhury said, because "some of the prostate cancers that are picked up are small and some may be clinically insignificant."
Dr. Chowdhury noted that the ratio of prostate cancer deaths to prostate cancer diagnoses is very different in the 2 regions — about 1 to 6.0 in the United States (based on estimates from the 2010 SEER database, showing a diagnosis in 215,000 men and 30,000 deaths) and about 1 to 3.7 in the United Kingdom (based on 2008 Cancer Research UK data, which show that there were 37,000 diagnoses and 10,100 deaths from prostate cancer).
There is a difference in the stage of prostate cancer at diagnosis — some American reports suggest that about 80% of the disease is localized, whereas in the United Kingdom, although most disease is also localized, there is a higher proportion of cancers diagnosed at an advanced stage, Dr. Chowdhury explained. Widespread PSA testing picks up prostate cancer at an earlier stage, which might be less aggressive and less clinically significant, he said.
"Not a Trivial Disease"
This is an extremely important study, which highlights the fact that prostate cancer is not a trivial disease for a large number of men in the United Kingdom who suffer from it," said Malcolm Mason, MD, head of oncology and palliative medicine at Cardiff University School of Medicine, United Kingdom. Dr. Mason is also chair of the UK National Cancer Research Institute's Prostate Cancer Clinical Studies Group, and was commenting in a statement issued by Cancer Research UK.Particularly for men with advanced prostate cancer, their disease poses a significant threat to their health and their life, and the old notion that 'most men die with it, not of it' is simply not true."
Since that study was carried out, there have been a number of important advances in treatment, Dr. Mason noted. "It is possible that not all of the men in this study who died of prostate cancer would die of it today with modern treatment," he said. In addition, many more men are diagnosed at a much earlier stage; for these men, the outlook is excellent, even without treatment, he added.
Need for Earlier Diagnosis and Treatment
Dr. Thrasher agreed with the conclusion that prostate cancer is not a trivial disease. "This study highlights the fact that prostate cancer can be a deadly disease," he said. "It speaks volumes about what happens when the cancer is advanced and out of the confines of the organ — it will kill you."
These data add weight to the argument for screening for prostate cancer, he said. They reinforce the need for earlier diagnosis and earlier treatment of the disease, and although the PSA test has its problems, it does result in both.
"There is no question that this is happening in the United States; we are finding and treating prostate cancer earlier," he said.
Dr. Thrasher cited 2010 estimates, from the Cancer Journal for Clinicians,that there were 217,000 new cases of prostate cancer diagnosed in the United States and 32,500 cancer deaths, which gives a mortality rate from the disease of 15%. In the United Kingdom, the rate is 50%.
There is a similar situation in Japan, he noted, where there is no routine PSA screening. Dr. Thrasher explained that he recently had the opportunity to talk to Japanese urologists during a joint meeting of the American and Japanese urological associations in Hawaii, and they were saying that by the time they see prostate cancer, it has often advanced to a stage where it is inoperable and not suitable for radiation.
Dr. Thrasher acknowledged that routine PSA testing can lead to the overdiagnosis and overtreatment of prostate cancer that might not be clinically significant. "We are starting to see some pullback as a result of this," he said, and although it is slow to gain ground in the United States, there is more use now of active surveillance as a treatment option, he told Medscape Medical News."We are starting to do this, especially in older men with low-grade, low-volume disease," he said. "However, right now, that is not mainline, and it is not a standard of care," he emphasized: "It is one option."
The very real benefit from PSA testing — finding prostate cancer at an earlier stage of disease, when it is still curable, which saves lives — has to be weighed against the potential for overdiagnosis and overtreatment, and the potential for anxiety from routine testing, he concluded. These latest data from the United Kingdom show that when there is no PSA testing, "you are losing about half your patients to the disease, and so it lends credibility toward leaning the other way," he said.
2011 Meeting of United Kingdom Association of Cancer Registries and National Cancer Intelligence Network (NCIN): Abstract 86. Presented June 16, 2011.
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