Guest guest Posted June 13, 2008 Report Share Posted June 13, 2008 Thursday, 12 June 2008 BERKELEY, CA (UroToday.com) - Positive surgical margins (PSM) are an adverse outcomes variable in patients undergoing radical prostatectomy (RP) and is the one variable that can be influenced by surgical technique. In the current literature, studies evaluating the impact of a PSM often exclude the effect of adjuvant therapy (AT), usually by excluding these patients. In a Journal of Urology May 2008 supplement, an important paper by Dr. Swindle and associates at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center and Baylor College of Medicine is revisited regarding this issue. The study used multiple methods of statistical analysis to account for the use of AT in a series of 1,389 patients operated on by 2 surgeons. The data was analyzed by proportional hazards models and dealt with patients who received AT in 5 ways; 1) exclusion. 2) inclusion (AT ignored), 3) censoring at the time of AT, 4) failing at the time of AT, 5) considering AT as a time dependent covariate. So this meant that the probability of recurrence was analyzed by first excluding all patients who received AT from the analysis, then by including those who received AT and ignoring the AT, then by censoring those patients at the time of AT, and finally by considering AT as treatment failure or recurrence. A total of 179 of the men had a PSM (12.9%). There was a median follow-up of 50 months and biochemical recurrence was defined as a PSA >0.4ng/ml and reconfirmed on a second PSA test. The incidence of PSM increased with increasing PSA, pathologic Gleason score and stage. The overall progression-free survival (PFS) for those with a PSM was 58%, compared with 81% for patients with negative surgical margins. A PSM was a significant predictor of cancer recurrence when analyzed by methods 1, 3, 4, and 5, but not method 2 in which AT was ignored. Pretreatment PSA, pathologic stage and grade were all independent predictors of progression in all 5 methods analyzed. A PSM was a significant predictor of progression for all methods of analysis, except for method 2. For patients with extra-capsular extension, a PSM was significant using all methods of examining patients who received AT. However, this decreased from 31.7% before 1990 to 11.1% after 2000. The year of surgery and presence of organ confined cancer contributed to the decrease in PSM incidence. These data are important as surgical techniques are again changing with the advent of robotic assisted laparoscopic radical prostatectomy. Swindle P, Eastham JA, Ohori M, Kattan MW, Wheeler T, Maru N, Slawin K, Scardino PT J Urol. 2008 May;179(5 Suppl):S47-51. doi: 10.1016/j.juro.2008.03.137 PubMed Abstract PMID: 18405751 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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