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April 16, 2007

Impact Of Surgical Margin Status On Long-Term Cancer Control After Radical Prostatectomy

UroToday.com- Patterns of prostate cancer (CaP) recurrence following radical prostatectomy (RP) demonstrate that up to 50% of patients will develop a high PSA level by 10 years after RP with most occurring within the first two years, but 20% occurring at greater than 5 years. Surgical margin status may impact this and is related to surgical technique, argues Dr. Orvieto from the University of Chicago who reports on the surgical series of Dr. Charles Brendler in the BJU International.

Between 1994 and 2004 a cohort of 996 men underwent RP by Dr. Brendler for clinically localized CaP. Mean patient age was 60 years and no patient received either neoadjuvant therapy or adjuvant therapy before biochemical failure. Pelvic lymph node dissection was performed in 44.5%. During pathologic review, any tumor at the inked margin was noted as a positive surgical margin (PSM), which was defined as focal if a solitary PSM and extensive when multifocal PSM was reported. Biochemical recurrence (BR) was defined as a PSA >0.1ng/ml and confirmed on a repeat assay.

Clinical stage was T1c in 60% and T2 disease in 40%. Ninety percent of patients had Gleason score 5-7 tumors on biopsy. Overall, a PSM was identified in 88 of 996 cases (8.8%). Only 12 of 694 patients with organ-confined disease (1.7) had a PSM. In those with extra-capsular extension, 60 of 241 (24.9%) and 16 of 59 (27%) with pT3a and pT3b disease had a PSM, respectively. Both clinical stage and pathological stage were statistically correlated with incidence of a PSM. Higher post-operative Gleason score did not correlate. The authors state that surgical modifications in 1995 and 2000 were followed by a significant decrease in PSM rates over time in patients with extra-capsular extension.

Overall, 97% of the cohort was available for follow-up at a mean of 6.4 years, during which 98 patients (10.1%) developed BR. Of these, 37% experienced a BR within a year of surgery and 61% with the first 2 years. Only 12% had a BR after 5 years from RP. The mean time to BR was 2.4 years. Follow-up was available in 871 men (90%) at 5 years and 135 men (14%) at 10 years. Kaplan-Meier analysis showed 5- and 10-year biochemical disease free survival rates of 90% and 86%, respectively. Adjuvant therapy was given to 89 men (9.2%) after RP. Nine men died from CaP.

Biochemical progression developed in 69 of 883 patients (8%) with negative surgical margins compared to 29 of 85 men (34%) with a PSM. Ten-year biochemical disease-free survival estimates for negative and positive surgical margins were 90% and 60%, respectively. A PSM was a significant predictor of recurrence in patients with both organ confined and pT3a disease. However, the risk of BR in those with pT3b disease was not impacted by the presence of a PSM. On multivariate analysis, the presence of a PSM and final pathological stage and Gleason score were the strongest predictors of subsequent BR.

Marcelo A. Orvieto, Nejd F. Alsikafi, Arieh L. Shalhav, Brett A. Laven, Gary D. Steinberg, Gregory P. Zagaja, Charles B. Brendler
BJU InternationalВ 98В (6),В 1199-1203.
Reviewed by UroToday.com Contributing Editor Christopher P. Evans, M.D.

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