A Decision Analysis of Alternative Treatment Strategies for Clinically Localized Prostate Cancer
- 26 May 1993
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Medical Association (AMA)
- Vol. 269 (20) , 2650-2658
- https://doi.org/10.1001/jama.1993.03500200064035
Abstract
Objective. —To model the impact of initial therapy on outcomes for men with localized (clinical stage A or B) prostatic carcinoma. Design. —A decision analysis modeling three strategies: radical prostatectomy, external-beam radiation therapy, and watchful waiting, with delayed hormonal therapy if metastatic disease develops. We modeled the main benefit of treatment as a reduction in the chance of death or disutility from metastatic disease. These benefits were offset in the model by the risks of treatment-related morbidity and mortality. The model was used to analyze expected outcomes by tumor grade (well, moderately, and poorly differentiated) for men 60 to 75 years of age. Data. —Probabilities and rates for important clinical events, obtained through review of the literature for prostatic carcinoma and analysis of Medicare claims data. Main Results. —Several patterns emerged within the range of uncertainty about the risks and benefits of treatment for prostatic carcinoma. In patients with well-differentiated tumor grades, based on clinical staging, treatment at best offers limited benefit in terms of quality-adjusted life expectancy and may result in harm to the patient. Among patients with moderately or poorly differentiated tumors, if we use the most optimistic assumptions about treatment efficacy, then patients aged 60 to 65 years would benefit from either radical prostatectomy or external-beam radiation therapy, compared with watchful waiting. However, in most other cases, treatment offers less than a 1-year improvement in quality-adjusted life expectancy or decreases the quality-adjusted life expectancy compared with watchful waiting. Invasive treatment generally appears to be harmful for patients older than 70 years. Conclusions. —Radical prostatectomy and radiation therapy may benefit selected groups of patients with localized prostate cancer, particularly younger patients with higher-grade tumors. However, our model shows that in most cases the potential benefits of therapy are small enough that the choice of therapy is sensitive to the patient's preferences for various outcomes and discounting. The choice of watchful waiting is a reasonable alternative to invasive treatment for many men with localized prostatic carcinoma. (JAMA. 1993;269:2650-2658)Keywords
This publication has 24 references indexed in Scilit:
- Radical Prostatectomy for Stage a Adenocarcinoma of the Prostate: Staging Errors and their Implications for Treatment Recommendations and Disease OutcomeJournal of Urology, 1991
- Development of Prostatic Carcinoma: Morphometric and pathologic features of early stagesActa Oncologica, 1991
- Histological Grading of Prostatic Carcinoma in Prostatectomy Specimens: Comparison of Prognostic Accuracy of Five Grading SystemsBritish Journal of Urology, 1990
- Pathologic findings in clinical stage A2 prostate cancer. Relation of tumor volume, grade, and location to pathologic stageCancer, 1990
- T(0) Carcinoma of the Prostate: Influence of Tumor Extent and Histologic Grade on Prognosis of Untreated PatientsEuropean Urology, 1986
- The Markov Process in Medical PrognosisMedical Decision Making, 1983
- Understaging and undergrading of prostate cancer Argument for postoperative radiation as adjuvant therapyUrology, 1983
- Staging Errors in Clinically Localized Prostatic CancerJournal of Urology, 1982
- Survival of Patients with Incidentally Found Microscopic Cancer of the Prostate: Results of a Clinical Trial of Conservative TreatmentJournal of Urology, 1972
- Treatment of Stage 1 Carcinoma of the Prostate: A Preliminary ReportJournal of Urology, 1971