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Study
details Quality of Life for Prostate Cancer
Patients four years out from treatment
Newswise — A long-term study by researchers
at UCLA’s Jonsson Comprehensive Cancer
Center found that the three most common
treatments for localized prostate cancer had
significant impacts on patients’ quality of
life, a finding that could help guide
doctors and patients in making treatment
decisions.
The four-year study, which followed 475 men
treated for early stage prostate cancer,
also resulted in the development of
“probability plots,” gauges which can be
used to predict when treatment side effects
such as urinary incontinence, sexual
dysfunction or bowel problems might return
to normal, or whether the patient will ever
fully recover.
Such predictions could be used to determine
whether further treatments or surgeries are
needed to deal with adverse side effects,
said Dr. John Gore, an urologist and the
study’s first author.
The study appears June 9 in the early online
edition of the Journal of the National
Cancer Institute.
“These probability plots are more helpful
than the normal functional trajectory curves
that are used,” Gore said.
“They allow people to point toward where the
function level is currently and predict what
it might be in the future.
"Is
a patient’s incontinence, for example,
likely to get better? If not, the doctor and
patients may agree to proceed with treatment
options such as drugs or surgery.”
The study is unique because it is not a
cross-sectional review. Rather, researchers
knew what a patient’s baseline function was
prior to treatment.
That
way, Gore said, they had a target to shoot
for in judging recovery from side effects.
The goal was to get the patient back to the
function level experienced before treatment,
if possible.
The researchers studied the quality of life
in men who either underwent radical
prostatectomy, implantation of radioactive
seeds in their prostate gland or had
external beam radiation therapy.
The three treatment options rank about
equally in survival outcomes for most men,
so specific impacts on quality of life
become paramount in making treatment
decisions, said Dr. Mark Litwin, the study’s
senior author, a professor or urology and a
researcher at UCLA’s Jonsson Cancer Center.
“The good news is that the patients’ overall
mental and physical well-being were not
profoundly affected by any of the three
treatment choices,” Litwin said.
“That’s good news for men with a diagnosis
of prostate cancer hanging over their heads.
In general, they’ll be OK, no matter which
of the three options they choose.”
The study found that urinary incontinence
was more common among patients who underwent
prostatectomy than those who had seed
implants, called brachytherapy, or external
beam radiation. Sexual dysfunction was found
in patients in all three treatment groups.
Surgery patients were less likely to regain
baseline sexual function than were patients
who underwent external beam radiation. Bowel
dysfunction and irritable bladder were more
common after either form of radiation
therapy than after prostatectomy.
Study patients were given comprehensive
questionnaires to fill out before treatment
to assess generic and prostate
cancer-specific, health-related quality of
life.
Questionnaires were filled out again at one,
two, four, eight, 12, 18, 24, 30, 36, 42 and
48 months after treatment to “capture
maximal fluctuations in functional
convalescence,” the study states.
The most rapid change in the slope of
patient recovery came very early after
treatment, Gore said, either for better or
worse. However, once more than two years had
passed, the patient’s recovery or decline
had stabilized.
The study patients were diagnosed with the
most common type of prostate cancer,
low-risk, clinically localized disease.
Many of the patients were older men and
already were experiencing age-related
functional issues such as erectile
dysfunction, so each had individual baseline
goals to achieve.
The study will allow oncologists to look at
the patient, look at the characteristics of
their cancer and determine what treatment
will mostly likely help them to achieve
their baseline health-related quality of
life.
For example, a patient with an existing
irritable bladder condition should probably
not receive external beam radiation because
the treatment could exacerbate the
underlying condition.
A patient’s acceptance of potential side
effects also should be considered.
“Different men are bothered by different
things, so it depends on what their baseline
function is,” Litwin said.
“If a man is already impotent, for example,
loss of sexual function won’t be an issue in
making a treatment decision.”
Funding for the study came from the
California Department of Health Services.
Prostate cancer is the most frequently
diagnosed cancer in men and the leading
cause of cancer deaths.
This year, more than 186,300 men will be
diagnosed cancer, and more than 28,000 men
will die.
UCLA's Jonsson Comprehensive Cancer Center
has more than 240 researchers and clinicians
engaged in disease research, prevention,
detection, control, treatment and education.
One of the nation's largest comprehensive
cancer centers, the Jonsson center is
dedicated to promoting research and
translating basic science into leading-edge
clinical studies.
In July 2008, the Jonsson Cancer Center was
named among the top 10 cancer centers
nationwide by U.S. News & World Report, a
ranking it has held for nine consecutive
years. For more information on the Jonsson
Cancer Center, visit our website at
http://www.cancer.ucla.edu.
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