Finasteride to Prevent Prostate Cancer: Should All Men or Only a High-Risk Subgroup Be Treated?
- 1 March 2010
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO) in Journal of Clinical Oncology
- Vol. 28 (7) , 1112-1116
- https://doi.org/10.1200/jco.2009.23.5572
Abstract
Purpose: Finasteride has been shown to reduce the incidence of prostate cancer. Yet the use of finasteride remains low, likely because of the risk of adverse effects. We sought to determine whether prostate-specific antigen (PSA) levels could identify a high-risk subgroup for which the benefits of finasteride treatment outweigh the potential harms. Patients and Methods: Raw data from the Prostate Cancer Prevention Trial were used to model chemopreventive treatment strategies: treat all men, treat no men, or treat a high-risk subgroup based on PSA level. We weighted the benefits (reduction in cancer rate) and harms (treatment rate) of each strategy using numbers-needed-to-treat thresholds—the maximum number of men a clinician would treat with finasteride to prevent one cancer. Results: Of 9,058 men, 1,957 were diagnosed with prostate cancer during the 7-year study. For the end point of all cancers, including both for-cause and end-of-study biopsies, the optimal strategy is to treat all or nearly all men. To reduce risk of cancers detected through routine care, treating men with PSA > 1.3 or > 2 ng/mL is optimal. For example, treating only men with PSA > 2 ng/mL reduced the treatment rate by 83% and resulted in a cancer rate only 1.1% higher than treating all men. Conclusion: Clinicians wishing to reduce the risk of any biopsy-detectable prostate cancer should recommend finasteride to all men. Clinicians who believe that it is unnecessary to prevent all cancers, but that preventing those readily detectable by screening would be desirable, would be best off recommending finasteride only to a high-risk subgroup.This publication has 18 references indexed in Scilit:
- Statistical methods to correct for verification bias in diagnostic studies are inadequate when there are few false negatives: a simulation studyBMC Medical Research Methodology, 2008
- Does the Level of Prostate Cancer Risk Affect Cancer Prevention with Finasteride?Urology, 2008
- Prostate-specific antigen at or before age 50 as a predictor of advanced prostate cancer diagnosed up to 25 years later: A case-control studyBMC Medicine, 2008
- Long-Term Prediction of Prostate Cancer Up to 25 Years Before Diagnosis of Prostate Cancer Using Prostate Kallikreins Measured at Age 44 to 50 YearsJournal of Clinical Oncology, 2007
- A review of the clinical efficacy and safety of 5α-reductase inhibitors for the enlarged prostateClinical Therapeutics, 2007
- Selecting patients for randomized trials: a systematic approach based on risk groupTrials, 2006
- Effect of Finasteride on the Sensitivity of PSA for Detecting Prostate CancerJNCI Journal of the National Cancer Institute, 2006
- Finasteride as a chemopreventive agent in prostate cancer: impact of the PCPT on urologic practiceNature Reviews Endocrinology, 2006
- The fallacy of enrolling only high-risk subjects in cancer prevention trials: Is there a "free lunch"?BMC Medical Research Methodology, 2004
- The Influence of Finasteride on the Development of Prostate CancerNew England Journal of Medicine, 2003