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Pathological outcomes of Japanese men eligible for active surveillance after radical prostatectomy
Authors:Takahiro Inoue  Hidefumi Kinoshita  Hidekazu Inui  Yoshihiro Komai  Masayuki Nakagawa  Naoki Oguchi  Gen Kawa  Motohiko Sugi  Chisato Ohe  Chika Miyasaka  Yorika Nakano  Noriko Sakaida  Yoshiko Uemura  Tadashi Matsuda
Affiliation:1. Department of Urology and Andrology, Kansai Medical University, 2-3-1 Shinmachi, Hirakata, Osaka, 5731191, Japan
2. Department of Clinical Pathology, Kansai Medical University, 2-3-1 Shinmachi, Hirakata, Osaka, 5731191, Japan
Abstract:

Background

The aim of this study was to analyze the pathological features of prostatectomy specimens from patients with low-risk prostate cancer eligible for active surveillance (AS) and evaluate preoperative data suitable for predicting upstaged (≥pT3) or upgraded disease (Gleason score of ≥7), defined as ‘reclassification’.

Methods

A retrospective analysis of 521 consecutive radical prostatectomy procedures (January 2005 through to December 2011) performed at our institution without neoadjuvant hormonal therapy was performed. Eighty-four patients fulfilled the following criteria—clinical T1 or T2 disease, prostate-specific antigen (PSA) level of ≤10 ng/ml, one or two positive biopsies, and Gleason score of <7. Clinicopathological features at diagnosis were compared between patients with and without reclassification after radical prostatectomy.

Results

Forty of 84 patients (47.6 %) had a Gleason score of ≥7, and 8 (9.5 %) had upstaged disease (≥pT3). Seven patients with upstaged disease also showed upgraded reclassification. Two patients with reclassification showed biochemical recurrence at 59 and 89 months after surgery, respectively. Preoperative parameters evaluated included age, PSA level, PSA density (PSAD), clinical T stage, and number and percentage of positive prostate cores. Among 82 patients with complete data, univariate analysis showed that PSAD (ng/ml2) was a significant parameter to discriminate patients with reclassified disease and those without reclassified disease (p < 0.001). Multivariate analysis revealed that PSAD was the only independent variable to predict disease with reclassification (p = 0.006).

Conclusions

Preoperative PSAD may be a good indicator for selecting patients eligible for AS in the Japanese population.
Keywords:
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