47 results on '"Ehdaie B"'
Search Results
2. (077) Testosterone Therapy in Men on Active Surveillance for Prostate Cancer
- Author
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Flores, J, primary, Salter, C A, additional, Benfante, N, additional, Jenkins, L, additional, Ehdaie, B, additional, Laudone, V, additional, Eastham, J, additional, and Mulhall, J P, additional
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- 2023
- Full Text
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3. Superior Post-Treatment Biopsy Outcomes with High Dose SBRT Compared to High-Dose Conventionally Fractionated IMRT for Clinically Localized Prostate Cancer
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Zelefsky, M.J., primary, Kollmeier, M.A., additional, White, C., additional, Zhang, Z., additional, Reuter, V., additional, Ehdaie, B., additional, Moore, A., additional, Samson, F., additional, Gorovets, D., additional, Damato, A.L., additional, Elsayegh, A., additional, and McBride, S.M., additional
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- 2022
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4. 177 Ejaculation Profiles in Men after Irreversible Electroporation for Prostate Cancer
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Martinez, J. Flores, primary, Benfante, N., additional, Chen, L., additional, Ehdaie, B., additional, and Mulhall, J.P., additional
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- 2022
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5. Genetic factors associated with prostate cancer conversion from active surveillance to treatment
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Jiang, Y, Meyers, TJ, Emeka, AA, Cooley, LF, Cooper, PR, Lancki, N, Helenowski, I, Kachuri, L, Lin, DW, Stanford, JL, Newcomb, LF, Kolb, S, Finelli, A, Fleshner, NE, Komisarenko, M, Eastham, JA, Ehdaie, B, Benfante, N, Logothetis, CJ, Gregg, JR, Perez, CA, Garza, S, Kim, J, Marks, LS, Delfin, M, Barsa, D, Vesprini, D, Klotz, LH, Loblaw, A, Mamedov, A, Goldenberg, SL, Higano, CS, Spillane, M, Wu, E, Carter, HB, Pavlovich, CP, Mamawala, M, Landis, T, Carroll, PR, Chan, JM, Cooperberg, MR, Cowan, JE, Morgan, TM, Siddiqui, J, Martin, R, Klein, EA, Brittain, K, Gotwald, P, Barocas, DA, Dallmer, JR, Gordetsky, JB, Steele, P, Kundu, SD, Stockdale, J, Roobol, MJ, Venderbos, LDF, Sanda, MG, Arnold, R, Patil, D, Evans, CP, Dall'Era, MA, Vij, A, Costello, AJ, Chow, K, Corcoran, NM, Rais-Bahrami, S, Phares, C, Scherr, DS, Flynn, T, Karnes, RJ, Koch, M, Dhondt, CR, Nelson, JB, McBride, D, Cookson, MS, Stratton, KL, Farriester, S, Hemken, E, Stadler, WM, Pera, T, Banionyte, D, Bianco, FJ, Lopez, IH, Loeb, S, Taneja, SS, Byrne, N, Amling, CL, Martinez, A, Boileau, L, Gaylis, FD, Petkewicz, J, Kirwen, N, Helfand, BT, Xu, J, Scholtens, DM, Catalona, WJ, Witte, JS, Jiang, Y, Meyers, TJ, Emeka, AA, Cooley, LF, Cooper, PR, Lancki, N, Helenowski, I, Kachuri, L, Lin, DW, Stanford, JL, Newcomb, LF, Kolb, S, Finelli, A, Fleshner, NE, Komisarenko, M, Eastham, JA, Ehdaie, B, Benfante, N, Logothetis, CJ, Gregg, JR, Perez, CA, Garza, S, Kim, J, Marks, LS, Delfin, M, Barsa, D, Vesprini, D, Klotz, LH, Loblaw, A, Mamedov, A, Goldenberg, SL, Higano, CS, Spillane, M, Wu, E, Carter, HB, Pavlovich, CP, Mamawala, M, Landis, T, Carroll, PR, Chan, JM, Cooperberg, MR, Cowan, JE, Morgan, TM, Siddiqui, J, Martin, R, Klein, EA, Brittain, K, Gotwald, P, Barocas, DA, Dallmer, JR, Gordetsky, JB, Steele, P, Kundu, SD, Stockdale, J, Roobol, MJ, Venderbos, LDF, Sanda, MG, Arnold, R, Patil, D, Evans, CP, Dall'Era, MA, Vij, A, Costello, AJ, Chow, K, Corcoran, NM, Rais-Bahrami, S, Phares, C, Scherr, DS, Flynn, T, Karnes, RJ, Koch, M, Dhondt, CR, Nelson, JB, McBride, D, Cookson, MS, Stratton, KL, Farriester, S, Hemken, E, Stadler, WM, Pera, T, Banionyte, D, Bianco, FJ, Lopez, IH, Loeb, S, Taneja, SS, Byrne, N, Amling, CL, Martinez, A, Boileau, L, Gaylis, FD, Petkewicz, J, Kirwen, N, Helfand, BT, Xu, J, Scholtens, DM, Catalona, WJ, and Witte, JS
- Abstract
Men diagnosed with low-risk prostate cancer (PC) are increasingly electing active surveillance (AS) as their initial management strategy. While this may reduce the side effects of treatment for prostate cancer, many men on AS eventually convert to active treatment. PC is one of the most heritable cancers, and genetic factors that predispose to aggressive tumors may help distinguish men who are more likely to discontinue AS. To investigate this, we undertook a multi-institutional genome-wide association study (GWAS) of 5,222 PC patients and 1,139 other patients from replication cohorts, all of whom initially elected AS and were followed over time for the potential outcome of conversion from AS to active treatment. In the GWAS we detected 18 variants associated with conversion, 15 of which were not previously associated with PC risk. With a transcriptome-wide association study (TWAS), we found two genes associated with conversion (MAST3, p = 6.9×10-7 and GAB2, p = 2.0×10-6). Moreover, increasing values of a previously validated 269-variant genetic risk score (GRS) for PC was positively associated with conversion (e.g., comparing the highest to the two middle deciles gave a hazard ratio [HR] = 1.13; 95% Confidence Interval [CI]= 0.94-1.36); whereas, decreasing values of a 36-variant GRS for prostate-specific antigen (PSA) levels were positively associated with conversion (e.g., comparing the lowest to the two middle deciles gave a HR = 1.25; 95% CI, 1.04-1.50). These results suggest that germline genetics may help inform and individualize the decision of AS-or the intensity of monitoring on AS-versus treatment for the initial management of patients with low-risk PC.
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- 2022
6. Social ecological influences on treatment decision-making in men diagnosed with low risk, localised prostate cancer
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McIntosh, M, Opozda, MJ, Short, CE, Galvao, DA, Tutino, R, Diefenbach, M, Ehdaie, B, Nelson, C, McIntosh, M, Opozda, MJ, Short, CE, Galvao, DA, Tutino, R, Diefenbach, M, Ehdaie, B, and Nelson, C
- Abstract
OBJECTIVE: Individuals diagnosed with low risk, localised prostate cancer (PCa) face a difficult decision between active surveillance (AS) and definitive treatment. We aimed to explore perceived influences on treatment decision-making from the patient and partner's perspectives. METHODS: Patients (and partners) who met AS criteria and had chosen their treatment were recruited. Semi-structured individual interviews were conducted via telephone to explore experiences of diagnosis, impact on patient lifestyle, experiences with physicians, treatment preferences/choice, treatment information understanding and needs, and overall decision-making process. Interviews were audio recorded, transcribed verbatim, and analysed using Reflexive Thematic Analysis. RESULTS: Twenty-four male patients (18 chose AS) and 12 female partners participated. Five themes relating to social-ecological influences on treatment choice were identified: (1) partner support and direct influence on patient treatment choice, (2) patient and partner vicarious experiences may influence treatment decisions, (3) the influence of the patient's life circumstances, (4) disclosing to wider social networks: friends, family, and co-workers, and (5) the importance of a good relationship and experience with physicians. Additionally, two themes were identified relating to information patients and partners received about the treatment options during their decision-making process. CONCLUSIONS: A range of individual and social influences on treatment decision-making were reported. Physicians providing treatment recommendations should consider and discuss the patient and partner's existing beliefs and treatment preferences and encourage shared decision-making. Further research on treatment decision-making of partnered and non-partnered PCa patients is required. We recommend research considers social ecological factors across the personal, interpersonal, community, and policy levels.
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- 2022
7. Ejaculation profiles in men after irreversible electroporation for prostate cancer
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Martinez, J. Flores, Benfante, N., Chen, L., Ehdaie, B., and Mulhall, J.P.
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- 2022
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8. Neoadjuvant Exercise Therapy in Patients With Prostate Cancer-Reply.
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Jones LW, Ehdaie B, and Boutros PC
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- 2024
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9. Quantification of Gleason Pattern 4 Metrics Identifies Pathologic Progression in Patients With Grade Group 2 Prostate Cancer on Active Surveillance.
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Perera M, Assel M, Nalavenkata S, Khaleel S, Benfante N, Carlsson SV, Reuter VE, Laudone VP, Scardino PT, Touijer KA, Eastham JA, Vickers AJ, Fine SW, and Ehdaie B
- Subjects
- Humans, Male, Aged, Middle Aged, Prostate pathology, Prostatic Neoplasms pathology, Neoplasm Grading, Watchful Waiting, Disease Progression
- Abstract
Background: During active surveillance (AS) for Grade Group (GG) 2 prostate cancer, pathologic progression to GG3 on surveillance biopsy is a trigger for intervention. However, this ratio of GP3:GP4, may be obscured by increases of relatively indolent disease. We aimed to explore changes in GP4 quantity during AS and propose alternative definitions for progression based on GP4 changes., Design, Setting, and Participants: We assessed patients enrolled on AS between November 2014 and March 2020 with GG2 disease on diagnostic biopsy and subsequent surveillance biopsy approximately 1 year later. Outcome measures included change in overall %GP4 and total length GP4 (mm)., Results and Limitations: 61 patients met the inclusion criteria, the median change in total length of GP4 and %GP4 was -0.12 mm (IQR -0.31, 0.09) and -2.5% (IQR -8.6, 0.0), respectively. Excluding the 35 patients with no evidence of GP4 on surveillance biopsy, median change in total GP4 length and %GP4 was 0.19 mm (IQR -0.04, 0.67) and 1.2% (IQR -1.6, 6.6), respectively. Three patients progressed to GG3 disease on surveillance biopsy, one of whom had only a small increase in %GP4. Conversely, an additional 2 patients who did not meet the criterion for GG3 had a large increase (> 1 mm) in total GP4 length., Conclusions: Presence of GG3 disease on surveillance biopsy as a trigger for treatment in men on AS is of questionable use alone; we suggest including other measures that do not depend on a ratio, such as an increase in total GP4 length., Competing Interests: Disclouser All conflicts of interest, including specific financial interests, relations and affiliations relevant to the subject matter or materials discussed in the manuscript (eg, employment, affiliations, grants or funding, consultancies, honoraria, stock ownership or options, expert testimony, royalties filed, received or pending, personal relationships), are listed below: Peter T. Scardino is named on a patent for a statistical method to detect prostate cancer that has been commercialized by OPKO Health (from which he receives royalties and stock options) and chairs the Medical Advisory board of Insightec as an unpaid consultant. Andrew J. Vickers is named on a patent for a statistical method to detect prostate cancer that has been commercialized by OPKO Health (from which he receives royalties and stock options) and has received consulting funds from Insightec and Steba. None of these companies contributed to or directed any of the research reported in this article. The other authors declare no conflict of interest, including specific financial interests or relationships and affiliations relevant to the subject matter or materials discussed in the manuscript., (Copyright © 2024 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2024
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10. Targeted Ablation Using Ultrasound-Guided Irreversible Electroporation of Index Tumors (TARGET Study): Prospective Development Study Evaluating Safety, Patient-Reported Outcomes, and Oncologic Efficacy.
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Fainberg J, Lee T, Vertosick EA, Sivaraman A, Chesnut G, Fine SW, Eastham J, Coleman J, and Ehdaie B
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- Humans, Male, Prospective Studies, Aged, Middle Aged, Treatment Outcome, Ablation Techniques methods, Ablation Techniques adverse effects, Quality of Life, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Prostatic Neoplasms surgery, Prostatic Neoplasms diagnostic imaging, Prostatic Neoplasms pathology, Patient Reported Outcome Measures, Electroporation methods, Ultrasonography, Interventional methods
- Abstract
Introduction: We studied patient-reported functional outcomes, safety, and oncologic efficacy of focal irreversible electroporation as a primary treatment for intermediate-risk prostate cancer., Methods: Between February 2015 and April 2017, 20 consecutive patients elected irreversible electroporation and underwent 22 treatments. All underwent MRI-targeted and systematic transrectal biopsies. Eligibility criteria were grade group 2/3 prostate cancer in a maximum of 2 adjacent sextant prostate sectors in 1 hemigland without extraprostatic extension on MRI. Ablation was performed with a 5-mm cancer margin. Any grade group 1 cancer outside mapped index lesion was untreated. Outcome measures were based on the Prostate Quality of Life Survey, Male Sexual Health Questionnaire, and MRI-targeted and systematic biopsies at 3 and 12 months., Results: Nineteen patients completed irreversible electroporation. One had electrocardiographic changes, and irreversible electroporation was aborted. No deterioration was detected in urinary or sexual domains (-0.2, 95% CI -1.4, 0.9, P = .7, and -1.9, 95% CI -10.1, 6.4, P = .6, respectively) or health-related quality of life (-0.2, 95% CI -1.4, 1.0, P = .7) at 6 months post ablation. Ejaculation volume decreased at 12 months (-1.5 points, 95% CI -2.4, -0.5, P = .003). At 12 months of follow-up, 14/19 patients (74%, 95% CI 49%, 91%) had no clinically significant cancer anywhere in the prostate. Radical treatment-free survival was 79% at 2 years (95% CI 53%, 92%) and 73% at 4 years (95% CI 47%, 88%)., Conclusions: Our data show promising oncologic and functional outcomes following focal irreversible electroporation treatment for carefully selected patients with intermediate-risk prostate cancer. Further research should compare irreversible electroporation with active surveillance.
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- 2024
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11. Pelvic Lymph Node Dissection in Prostate Cancer: Update from a Randomized Clinical Trial of Limited Versus Extended Dissection.
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Touijer KA, Vertosick EA, Sjoberg DD, Liso N, Nalavenkata S, Melao B, Laudone VP, Ehdaie B, Carver B, Eastham JA, Scardino PT, and Vickers AJ
- Abstract
Background and Objective: Lymph node dissection (LND) has been standard in cancer surgery for more than a century, yet evidence from randomized trials showing a benefit is scarce. We conducted a clinically integrated randomized trial comparing limited versus extended pelvic LND (PLND) during radical prostatectomy and previously reported comparable biochemical recurrence (BCR) rates. We report updated BCR rates and compare rates of metastasis between the study arms., Methods: Between October 2011 and March 2017, 1432 patients undergoing radical prostatectomy were enrolled at a single center. Surgeons were cluster randomized to perform limited (external iliac nodes) or extended PLND (external iliac, obturator, and hypogastric nodes) with crossover for 3-mo periods. Cox proportional-hazards regression with robust standard errors clustered by surgeon was used to assess whether the PLND template affected BCR or distant or locoregional metastasis., Key Findings and Limitations: There were 452 BCR events at median follow-up of 4.2 yr for participants who did not develop BCR. The results confirm our previous finding of comparable BCR rates between the arms (hazard ratio [HR] 1.05, 95% confidence interval [CI] 0.97-1.13; p = 0.3). However, with 123 metastasis events and median follow-up of 5.4 yr for patients without metastasis, we found a clinically and statistically significant protective effect of extended PLND against metastasis (any metastasis: HR 0.82, 95% CI 0.71-0.93; p = 0.003; distant metastasis: HR 0.75, 95% CI 0.64-0.88; p < 0.001)., Conclusions and Clinical Implications: Patients undergoing radical prostatectomy should receive extended PLND that includes the external iliac, obturator, and hypogastric nodes. Further research should examine biological mechanisms regarding the anatomic location of affected nodes. Trials of LND for other cancers are warranted and should consider our clinically integrated design. This trial is registered on ClinicalTrials.gov as NCT01407263., (Copyright © 2024. Published by Elsevier B.V.)
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- 2024
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12. A digital, decentralized trial of exercise therapy in patients with cancer.
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Underwood WP, Michalski MG, Lee CP, Fickera GA, Chun SS, Eng SE, Liu LY, Tsai BL, Moskowitz CS, Lavery JA, Van Zee KJ, Gardner GJ, Mueller JJ, Dang CT, Ehdaie B, Laudone VP, Eastham JA, Scott JM, Boutros PC, and Jones LW
- Abstract
We developed and evaluated the Digital Platform for Exercise (DPEx): a decentralized, patient-centric approach designed to enhance all aspects of clinical investigation of exercise therapy. DPEx integrated provision of a treadmill with telemedicine and remote biospecimen collection permitting all study procedures to be conducted in patient's homes. Linked health biodevices enabled high-resolution monitoring of lifestyle and physiological response. Here we describe the rationale and development of DPEx as well as feasibility evaluation in three different cohorts of patients with cancer: a phase 0a development study among three women with post-treatment primary breast cancer; a phase 0b proof-of-concept trial of neoadjuvant exercise therapy in 13 patients with untreated solid tumors; and a phase 1a level-finding trial of neoadjuvant exercise therapy in 53 men with localized prostate cancer. Collectively, our study demonstrates the utility of a fully digital, decentralized approach to conduct clinical trials of exercise therapy in a clinical population., (© 2024. The Author(s).)
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- 2024
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13. Successful completion of large, low-cost randomized cancer trials at an academic cancer center.
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Vickers AJ, Ehdaie B, Tokita HK, Nelson J, Matros E, Pusic AL, and D'Angelica M
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Background: Concerns about low accrual have long been a standard part of the discourse on cancer clinical trials, reaching even as far as the news media. Indeed, so many trials are closed before completing accrual that a cottage industry has recently developed creating statistical models to predict trial failure. We previously proposed four methodologic fixes for the current crisis in clinical trials: (1) dramatically reducing the number of eligibility criteria, (2) using data routinely collected in clinical practice for trial endpoints; then lowering barriers to accrual by (3) cluster randomization or (4) staged consent., Methods: We report our practical experience of applying these fixes to randomized trials at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center., Results: We have completed seven single-center randomized trials, with several more underway and accruing rapidly, with a total accrual approaching 10,000. Many of the trials have compared surgical interventions, an area where trials have traditionally been hard to complete. Only one of these trials was externally funded. While low costs were possible due to the existing research infrastructure at our institution, such infrastructure is common at major cancer centers., Conclusions: Further research on innovative clinical trial designs is warranted, particularly in higher-stakes settings, and in trials of medical and radiotherapy interventions., Competing Interests: Declaration of conflicting interestsThe author(s) declared no potential conflicts of interest with respect to the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article.
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- 2024
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14. Transperineal vs Transrectal Prostate Biopsy-The PREVENT Randomized Clinical Trial.
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Hu JC, Assel M, Allaf ME, Vickers AJ, Ehdaie B, Cohen AJ, Green DA, Ghazi A, Ristau BT, Kowalczyk KJ, George AK, Patel HD, Montgomery JS, Han M, Rezaee M, Pavlovich CP, Patel NA, Ross AE, Kundu SD, Wang GJ, Shoag JE, Singla N, Stensland K, Gorin MA, Schaeffer AJ, and Schaeffer EM
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- 2024
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15. Microsatellite Instability, Tumor Mutational Burden, and Response to Immune Checkpoint Blockade in Patients with Prostate Cancer.
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Lenis AT, Ravichandran V, Brown S, Alam SM, Katims A, Truong H, Reisz PA, Vasselman S, Nweji B, Autio KA, Morris MJ, Slovin SF, Rathkopf D, Danila D, Woo S, Vargas HA, Laudone VP, Ehdaie B, Reuter V, Arcila M, Berger MF, Viale A, Scher HI, Schultz N, Gopalan A, Donoghue MTA, Ostrovnaya I, Stopsack KH, Solit DB, and Abida W
- Subjects
- Humans, Male, Aged, Middle Aged, Biomarkers, Tumor genetics, Aged, 80 and over, DNA Mismatch Repair, Antibodies, Monoclonal, Humanized therapeutic use, Microsatellite Instability, Immune Checkpoint Inhibitors therapeutic use, Prostatic Neoplasms genetics, Prostatic Neoplasms drug therapy, Prostatic Neoplasms pathology, Prostatic Neoplasms immunology, Prostatic Neoplasms mortality, Mutation
- Abstract
Purpose: Patients with microsatellite instability-high/mismatch repair-deficient (MSI-H/dMMR) and high tumor mutational burden (TMB-H) prostate cancers are candidates for pembrolizumab. We define the genomic features, clinical course, and response to immune checkpoint blockade (ICB) in patients with MSI-H/dMMR and TMB-H prostate cancers without MSI [TMB-H/microsatellite stable (MSS)]., Experimental Design: We sequenced 3,244 tumors from 2,257 patients with prostate cancer. MSI-H/dMMR prostate cancer was defined as an MSIsensor score ≥10 or MSIsensor score ≥3 and <10 with a deleterious MMR alteration. TMB-H was defined as ≥10 mutations/megabase. PSA50 and RECIST responses were assigned. Overall survival and radiographic progression-free survival (rPFS) were compared using log-rank test., Results: Sixty-three (2.8%) men had MSI-H/dMMR, and 33 (1.5%) had TMB-H/MSS prostate cancers. Patients with MSI-H/dMMR and TMB-H/MSS tumors more commonly presented with grade group 5 and metastatic disease at diagnosis. MSI-H/dMMR tumors had higher TMB, indel, and neoantigen burden compared with TMB-H/MSS. Twenty-seven patients with MSI-H/dMMR and 8 patients with TMB-H/MSS tumors received ICB, none of whom harbored polymerase epsilon (polE) catalytic subunit mutations. About 45% of patients with MSI-H/dMMR had a RECIST response, and 65% had a PSA50 response. No patient with TMB-H/MSS had a RECIST response, and 50% had a PSA50 response. rPFS tended to be longer in patients with MSI-H/dMMR than in patients with TMB-H/MSS who received immunotherapy. Pronounced differences in genomics, TMB, or MSIsensor score were not detected between MSI-H/dMMR responders and nonresponders., Conclusions: MSI-H/dMMR prostate cancers have greater TMB, indel, and neoantigen burden than TMB-H/MSS prostate cancers, and these differences may contribute to profound and durable responses to ICB., (©2024 American Association for Cancer Research.)
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- 2024
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16. Neoadjuvant Exercise Therapy in Prostate Cancer: A Phase 1, Decentralized Nonrandomized ControlledTrial.
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Jones LW, Moskowitz CS, Lee CP, Fickera GA, Chun SS, Michalski MG, Stoeckel K, Underwood WP, Lavery JA, Bhanot U, Linkov I, Dang CT, Ehdaie B, Laudone VP, Eastham JA, Collins A, Sheerin PT, Liu LY, Eng SE, and Boutros PC
- Subjects
- Humans, Male, Aged, Middle Aged, Prostate-Specific Antigen blood, Ki-67 Antigen analysis, Ki-67 Antigen metabolism, Treatment Outcome, Feasibility Studies, Prostatic Neoplasms therapy, Prostatic Neoplasms pathology, Neoadjuvant Therapy, Exercise Therapy methods
- Abstract
Importance: Observational data have shown that postdiagnosis exercise is associated with reduced risk of prostate cancer death. The feasibility and tumor biological activity of exercise therapy is not known., Objective: To identify recommended phase 2 dose of exercise therapy for patients with prostate cancer., Design, Setting, and Participants: This single-center, phase 1a dose-finding trial was conducted at a tertiary cancer center using a patientcentric, decentralized platform and included 53 inactive men with treatment-naive localized prostate cancer scheduled to undergo surgical resection between June 2019 and January 2023. Data were analyzed in June 2024., Intervention: Six escalated exercise therapy dose levels ranging from 90 to 450 minutes per week of individualized, moderate-intensity treadmill walking, allocated using adaptive continual reassessment. All exercise therapy sessions were conducted remotely with real-time monitoring., Main Outcomes and Measures: Feasibility was evaluated by relative exercise dose intensity (REDI). A dose level was considered feasible if 70% or more of patients achieved an REDI of 75% or greater. Activity end points were changes in tumor cell proliferation (Ki67) and plasma prostate-specific antigen levels between pretreatment and postintervention. Safety and changes in patient physiology were also assessed., Results: A total of 53 men were enrolled (median [IQR] age, 61 [56-66] years). All dose levels were feasible (≥75% REDI). The mean (95% CI) changes in Ki67 were 5.0% (-4.3% to 14.0%) for 90 minutes per week, 2.4% (-1.3% to 6.2%) for 150 minutes per week, -1.3% (-5.8% to 3.3%) for 225 minutes per week, -0.2% (-4.0% to 3.7%) for 300 minutes per week, -2.6% (-9.2% to 4.1%) for 375 minutes per week, and 2.2% (-0.8% to 5.1%) for 450 minutes per week. Changes in prostate-specific antigen levels were 1.0 ng/mL (-1.8 to 3.8) for 90 minutes per week, 0.2 ng/mL (-1.1 to 1.5) for 150 minutes per week, -0.5 ng/mL (-1.2 to 0.3) for 225 minutes per week, -0.2 (-1.7 to 1.3) for 300 minutes per week, -0.7 ng/mL (-1.7 to 0.4) for 375 minutes per week, and -0.9 ng/mL (-2.4 to 0.7) for 450 minutes per week. No serious adverse events were observed. Overall, 225 minutes per week (approximately 45 minutes per treatment at 5 times weekly) was selected as the recommended phase 2 dose., Conclusions and Relevance: The results of this nonrandomized clinical trial suggest that neoadjuvant exercise therapy is feasible and safe with promising activity in localized prostate cancer., Trial Registration: ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT03813615.
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- 2024
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17. Randomized Trial of Transverse vs Vertical Extraction Site Incision After Robotic Radical Prostatectomy.
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Gaffney CD, Vertosick EA, Laudone V, Goh AC, Carlsson SV, Pietzak E, Donahue T, Smith R, Touijer K, Vickers AJ, and Ehdaie B
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- Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Aged, Incidence, Prostatic Neoplasms surgery, Postoperative Complications epidemiology, Postoperative Complications etiology, Prostatectomy methods, Prostatectomy adverse effects, Robotic Surgical Procedures adverse effects, Robotic Surgical Procedures methods, Cross-Over Studies, Incisional Hernia epidemiology, Incisional Hernia etiology, Incisional Hernia prevention & control
- Abstract
Purpose: Incisional hernias are a frequent complication following robotic radical prostatectomy. Observational data in men undergoing robotic prostatectomy suggest that transverse closure resulted in lower hernia rates than vertical closure. We sought to compare the incidence of incisional hernia after robotic radical prostatectomy after vertical and transverse extraction site closure., Materials and Methods: We conducted a clinically integrated, crossover, cluster randomized trial at a single tertiary referral center (January 2016-September 2021) comparing the rate of hernia after transverse vs vertical extraction site excision in 1356 patients treated with minimally invasive radical prostatectomy. The primary outcome was between-group incidence of incisional hernia within 15 months of prostatectomy defined by physical examination and self-reported patient surveys., Results: Overall, 197 (20%) patients developed an incisional hernia within 15 months, 797 did not have an incisional hernia within this period, and 362 had missing outcome data regarding incisional hernia. We found no significant difference in hernia rates between the 2 incision types (absolute between-group difference 1.8%; 95% CI -3.4%, 6.6%; P = .5) in the primary analysis or in the 3 sensitivity analyses. Notably, because of the inclusive definition of hernia used, these data cannot be used as an estimate of the true prevalence of incisional hernia., Conclusions: Surgeons should choose the incision and closure approach they are most comfortable with when extracting specimens. Studies of modifications to the surgical technique are best conducted as randomized comparisons, and the clinically integrated, crossover, cluster randomized trial allows large trials to be completed at a single center and at low cost., Trial Registration: ClinicalTrials.gov: NCT01407263.
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- 2024
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18. Transperineal Versus Transrectal Magnetic Resonance Imaging-targeted and Systematic Prostate Biopsy to Prevent Infectious Complications: The PREVENT Randomized Trial.
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Hu JC, Assel M, Allaf ME, Ehdaie B, Vickers AJ, Cohen AJ, Ristau BT, Green DA, Han M, Rezaee ME, Pavlovich CP, Montgomery JS, Kowalczyk KJ, Ross AE, Kundu SD, Patel HD, Wang GJ, Graham JN, Shoag JE, Ghazi A, Singla N, Gorin MA, Schaeffer AJ, and Schaeffer EM
- Subjects
- Humans, Male, Aged, Middle Aged, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Interventional, Prospective Studies, Image-Guided Biopsy methods, Image-Guided Biopsy adverse effects, Perineum, Antibiotic Prophylaxis methods, Rectum microbiology, Prostate pathology, Prostatic Neoplasms pathology
- Abstract
Background and Objective: The transrectal biopsy approach is traditionally used to detect prostate cancer. An alternative transperineal approach is historically performed under general anesthesia, but recent advances enable transperineal biopsy to be performed under local anesthesia. We sought to compare infectious complications of transperineal biopsy without antibiotic prophylaxis versus transrectal biopsy with targeted prophylaxis., Methods: We assigned biopsy-naïve participants to undergo transperineal biopsy without antibiotic prophylaxis versus transrectal biopsy with targeted prophylaxis (rectal culture screening for fluoroquinolone-resistant bacteria and antibiotic targeting to culture and sensitivity results) through a multicenter, randomized trial. The primary outcome was post-biopsy infection captured by a prospective medical review and patient report on a 7-d survey. The secondary outcomes included cancer detection, noninfectious complications, and a numerical rating scale (0-10) for biopsy-related pain and discomfort during and 7-d after biopsy., Key Findings and Limitations: A total of 658 participants were randomized, with zero transperineal versus four (1.4%) transrectal biopsy infections (difference -1.4%; 95% confidence interval [CI] -3.2%, 0.3%; p = 0.059). The rates of other complications were very low and similar. Importantly, detection of clinically significant cancer was similar (53% transperineal vs 50% transrectal, adjusted difference 2.0%; 95% CI -6.0, 10). Participants in the transperineal arm experienced worse periprocedural pain (0.6 adjusted difference [0-10 scale], 95% CI 0.2, 0.9), but the effect was small and resolved by 7-d., Conclusions and Clinical Implications: Office-based transperineal biopsy is tolerable, does not compromise cancer detection, and did not result in infectious complications. Transrectal biopsy with targeted prophylaxis achieved similar infection rates, but requires rectal cultures and careful attention to antibiotic selection and administration. Consideration of these factors and antibiotic stewardship should guide clinical decision-making., Patient Summary: In this multicenter randomized trial, we compare prostate biopsy infectious complications for the transperineal versus transrectal approach. The absence of infectious complications with transperineal biopsy without the use of preventative antibiotics is noteworthy, but not significantly different from transrectal biopsy with targeted antibiotic prophylaxis., (Copyright © 2024 European Association of Urology. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
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- 2024
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19. The Transatlantic Recommendations for Prostate Gland Evaluation with Magnetic Resonance Imaging After Focal Therapy (TARGET): A Systematic Review and International Consensus Recommendations.
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Light A, Mayor N, Cullen E, Kirkham A, Padhani AR, Arya M, Bomers JGR, Dudderidge T, Ehdaie B, Freeman A, Guillaumier S, Hindley R, Lakhani A, Pendse D, Punwani S, Rastinehad AR, Rouvière O, Sanchez-Salas R, Schoots IG, Sokhi HK, Tam H, Tempany CM, Valerio M, Verma S, Villeirs G, van der Meulen J, Ahmed HU, and Shah TT
- Abstract
Background and Objective: Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) can detect recurrences after focal therapy for prostate cancer but there is no robust guidance regarding its use. Our objective was to produce consensus recommendations on MRI acquisition, interpretation, and reporting after focal therapy., Methods: A systematic review was performed in July 2022 to develop consensus statements. A two-round consensus exercise was then performed, with a consensus meeting in January 2023, during which 329 statements were scored by 23 panellists from Europe and North America spanning urology, radiology, and pathology with experience across eight focal therapy modalities. Using RAND Corporation/University of California-Los Angeles methodology, the Transatlantic Recommendations for Prostate Gland Evaluation with MRI after Focal Therapy (TARGET) were based on consensus for statements scored with agreement or disagreement., Key Findings and Limitations: In total, 73 studies were included in the review. All 20 studies (100%) reporting suspicious imaging features cited focal contrast enhancement as suspicious for cancer recurrence. Of 31 studies reporting MRI assessment criteria, the Prostate Imaging-Reporting and Data System (PI-RADS) score was the scheme used most often (20 studies; 65%), followed by a 5-point Likert score (six studies; 19%). For the consensus exercise, consensus for statements scored with agreement or disagreement increased from 227 of 295 statements (76.9%) in round one to 270 of 329 statements (82.1%) in round two. Key recommendations include performing routine MRI at 12 mo using a multiparametric protocol compliant with PI-RADS version 2.1 standards. PI-RADS category scores for assessing recurrence within the ablation zone should be avoided. An alternative 5-point scoring system is presented that includes a major dynamic contrast enhancement (DCE) sequence and joint minor diffusion-weighted imaging and T2-weighted sequences. For the DCE sequence, focal nodular strong early enhancement was the most suspicious imaging finding. A structured minimum reporting data set and minimum reporting standards for studies detailing MRI data after focal therapy are presented., Conclusions and Clinical Implications: The TARGET consensus recommendations may improve MRI acquisition, interpretation, and reporting after focal therapy for prostate cancer and provide minimum standards for study reporting., Patient Summary: Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scans can detect recurrent of prostate cancer after focal treatments, but there is a lack of guidance on MRI use for this purpose. We report new expert recommendations that may improve practice., (Copyright © 2024 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
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- 2024
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20. Implementation and Validation of an Automated, Longitudinal Robotic Surgical Evaluation and Feedback Program at a High-volume Center and Impact on Training.
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Wilcox Vanden Berg RN, Vertosick EA, Sjoberg DD, Cha EK, Coleman JA, Donahue TF, Eastham JA, Ehdaie B, Laudone VP, Pietzak EJ, Smith RC, and Goh AC
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Background: Surgical education lacks a standardized, proficiency-based approach to evaluation and feedback., Objective: To assess the implementation and reception (ie, feasibility) of an automated, standardized, longitudinal surgical skill assessment and feedback system, and identify baseline trainee (resident and fellow) characteristics associated with achieving proficiency in robotic surgery while learning robotic-assisted laparoscopic prostatectomy., Design Setting and Participants: A quality improvement study assessing a pilot of a surgical experience tracking program was conducted over 1 yr. Participants were six fellows, eight residents, and nine attending surgeons at a tertiary cancer center., Intervention: Trainees underwent baseline self-assessment. After each surgery, an evaluation was completed independently by the trainee and attending surgeons. Performance was rated on a five-point anchored Likert scale (trainees were considered "proficient" when attending surgeons' rating was ≥4). Technical skills were assessed using the Global Evaluative Assessment of Robotic Skills (GEARS) and Prostatectomy Assessment and Competency Evaluation (PACE)., Outcome Measurements and Statistical Analysis: Program success and utility were assessed by evaluating completion rates, evaluation completion times, and concordance rates between attending and trainee surgeons, and exit surveys. Baseline characteristics were assessed to determine associations with achieving proficiency., Results and Limitations: Completion rates for trainees and attending surgeons were 72% and 77%, respectively. Fellows performed more steps/cases than residents (median [interquartile range]: 5 [3-7] and 3 [2-4], respectively; p < 0.01). Prior completion of robotics or laparoscopic skill courses and surgical experience measures were associated with achieving proficiency in multiple surgical steps and GEARS domains. Interclass correlation coefficients on individual components were 0.27-0.47 on GEARS domains., Conclusions: An automated surgical experience tracker with structured, longitudinal evaluation and feedback can be implemented with good participation and minimal participant time commitment, and can guide curricular development in a proficiency-based education program by identifying modifiable factors associated with proficiency, individualizing education, and identifying improvement areas within the education program., Patient Summary: An automated, standardized, longitudinal surgical skill assessment and feedback system can be implemented successfully in surgical education settings and used to inform education plans and predict trainee proficiency., (© 2024 The Authors.)
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- 2024
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21. A Provider-Facing Decision Support Tool for Prostate Cancer Screening in Primary Care: A Pilot Study.
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Carlsson SV, Preston MA, Vickers A, Malhotra D, Ehdaie B, Healey MJ, and Kibel AS
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- Male, Humans, Aged, Prostate-Specific Antigen, Pilot Projects, Early Detection of Cancer, Decision Making, Primary Health Care, Mass Screening, Prostatic Neoplasms diagnosis, Prostatic Neoplasms prevention & control, Physicians, Primary Care
- Abstract
Objectives: Our objective was to pilot test an electronic health record-embedded decision support tool to facilitate prostate-specific antigen (PSA) screening discussions in the primary care setting., Methods: We pilot-tested a novel decision support tool that was used by 10 primary care physicians (PCPs) for 6 months, followed by a survey. The tool comprised (1) a risk-stratified algorithm, (2) a tool for facilitating shared decision-making (Simple Schema), (3) three best practice advisories (BPAs: <45, 45-75, and >75 years), and (4) a health maintenance module for scheduling automated reminders about PSA rescreening., Results: All PCPs found the tool feasible, acceptable, and clear to use. Eight out of ten PCPs reported that the tool made PSA screening conversations somewhat or much easier. Before using the tool, 70% of PCPs felt confident in their ability to discuss PSA screening with their patient, and this improved to 100% after the tool was used by PCPs for 6 months. PCPs found the BPAs for eligible (45-75 years) and older men (>75 years) more useful than the BPA for younger men (<45 years). Among the 10 PCPs, 60% found the Simple Schema to be very useful, and 50% found the health maintenance module to be extremely or very useful. Most PCPs reported the components of the tool to be at least somewhat useful, with 10% finding them to be very burdensome., Conclusion: We demonstrated the feasibility and acceptability of the tool, which is notable given the marked low acceptance of existing tools. All PCPs reported that they would consider continuing to use the tool in their clinic and were likely or very likely to recommend the tool to a colleague., Competing Interests: S.V.C. has received travel reimbursement and speaker honorarium from Ipsen and has served on an advisory board, unrelated to the present study. The authors have no other potential conflicts of interest to disclose., (Thieme. All rights reserved.)
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- 2024
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22. Provider Perceptions of an Electronic Health Record Prostate Cancer Screening Tool.
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Carlsson SV, Preston M, Vickers A, Malhotra D, Ehdaie B, Healey M, and Kibel AS
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- Male, Humans, Prostate-Specific Antigen, Early Detection of Cancer, Electronic Health Records, Practice Patterns, Physicians', Mass Screening, Prostatic Neoplasms diagnosis, Physicians, Primary Care
- Abstract
Objectives: We conducted a focus group to assess the attitudes of primary care physicians (PCPs) toward prostate-specific antigen (PSA)-screening algorithms, perceptions of using decision support tools, and features that would make such tools feasible to implement., Methods: A multidisciplinary team (primary care, urology, behavioral sciences, bioinformatics) developed the decision support tool that was presented to a focus group of 10 PCPs who also filled out a survey. Notes and audio-recorded transcripts were analyzed using Thematic Content Analysis., Results: The survey showed that PCPs followed different guidelines. In total, 7/10 PCPs agreed that engaging in shared decision-making about PSA screening was burdensome. The majority (9/10) had never used a decision aid for PSA screening. Although 70% of PCPs felt confident about their ability to discuss PSA screening, 90% still felt a need for a provider-facing platform to assist in these discussions. Three major themes emerged: (1) confirmatory reactions regarding the importance, innovation, and unmet need for a decision support tool embedded in the electronic health record; (2) issues around implementation and application of the tool in clinic workflow and PCPs' own clinical bias; and (3) attitudes/reflections regarding discrepant recommendations from various guideline groups that cause confusion., Conclusion: There was overwhelmingly positive support for the need for a provider-facing decision support tool to assist with PSA-screening decisions in the primary care setting. PCPs appreciated that the tool would allow flexibility for clinical judgment and documentation of shared decision-making. Incorporation of suggestions from this focus group into a second version of the tool will be used in subsequent pilot testing., Competing Interests: None declared., (Thieme. All rights reserved.)
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- 2024
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23. A brief mind-body intervention to reduce pain and anxiety during prostate needle biopsy: a clinically integrated randomized controlled trial with 2-staged consent.
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Gaffney CD, Vertosick EA, Carlsson SV, Lin X, Wolchasty N, Hardbattle R, Vickers AJ, and Ehdaie B
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- Male, Humans, Pain etiology, Pain prevention & control, Pain pathology, Biopsy, Needle methods, Anxiety etiology, Anxiety prevention & control, Informed Consent, Prostate pathology, Pain Management methods
- Abstract
Objectives: Many patients experience pain, anxiety, and discomfort with prostate biopsy, which may discourage enrollment in active surveillance programs or follow-up biopsy. Guided meditation can significantly reduce pain and anxiety during percutaneous biopsy. We sought to evaluate the effectiveness of a brief mind-body intervention on patient-reported outcomes after prostate biopsy., Methods and Materials: We performed a clinically-integrated randomized controlled trial of a brief mind-body intervention during biopsy compared to usual care at a single tertiary care center from 2018 to 2022. All patients offered transrectal ultrasound-guided prostate biopsy in the clinic with local anesthesia were eligible for enrollment. This clinically integrated trial was conducted simultaneously with a randomized controlled trial of 1-stage and 2-stage consent. The primary outcome was patient-reported pain, anxiety, discomfort, and tolerability on a visual-analog scale (0-10). A 15% improvement was prespecified as clinically relevant. We compared the proportion of men in each arm reporting a severe score (7-10) on any of the 4 scales using Fisher's exact test and then compared means for each scale separately using ANCOVA with randomization stratum (first vs. prior biopsy) as a covariate., Results: Of 263 eligible patients, 238 enrolled (119 per arm). One hundred seventy-two (72%) enrolled with 2-stage consent. A total of 37/94 (39%) and 38/102 (37%) patients randomized to usual care and intervention, respectively, reported severe scores in any of the 4 domains, a difference of 2.1% (95% confidence interval [CI] -13, 17%, P = 0.8). There was no evidence of a difference in mean postbiopsy anxiety (P = 0.3), discomfort (P = 0.09), pain (P = 0.4) or tolerability scores (P = 0.2)., Conclusions: A clinically meaningful benefit for this brief mind-body intervention during prostate biopsy is unlikely. Robust patient enrollment is feasible using 2-stage consent., Competing Interests: Declaration of Competing Interest The authors have no relevant conflicts of interest to disclose., (Copyright © 2023. Published by Elsevier Inc.)
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- 2023
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24. A randomized comparison of two-stage versus traditional one-stage consent for a low-stakes randomized trial.
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Vickers AJ, Vertosick EA, Austria M, Gaffney CD, Carlsson SV, Kim SY, and Ehdaie B
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- Male, Humans, Informed Consent, Anxiety, Emotions
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Background/aims: It has been proposed that informed consent for randomized trials should be split into two stages, with the purported advantage of decreased information overload and patient anxiety. We compared patient understanding, anxiety and decisional quality between two-stage and traditional one-stage consent., Methods: We approached patients at an academic cancer center for a low-stakes trial of a mind-body intervention for procedural distress during prostate biopsy. Patients were randomized to hear about the trial by either one- or two-stage consent (n = 66 vs n = 59). Patient-reported outcomes included Quality of Informed Consent (0-100); general and consent-specific anxiety and decisional conflict, burden, and regret., Results: Quality of Informed Consent scores were non-significantly superior for two-stage consent, by 0.9 points (95% confidence interval = -2.3, 4.2, p = 0.6) for objective and 1.1 points (95% CI = -4.8, 7.0, p = 0.7) for subjective understanding. Differences between groups for anxiety and decisional outcomes were similarly small. In a post hoc analysis, consent-related anxiety was lower among two-stage control patients, likely because scores were measured close to the time of biopsy in the two-stage patients receiving the experimental intervention., Conclusion: Two-stage consent maintains patient understanding of randomized trials, with some evidence of lowered patient anxiety. Further research is warranted on two-stage consent in higher-stakes settings., Competing Interests: Declaration of conflicting interestsThe author(s) declared the following potential conflicts of interest with respect to the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article: S.Y.H.K. is a Federal employee, but the views are his own and do not represent the views of the National Institutes of Health (NIH), Department of Health and Human Services (DHHS), or the US government.
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- 2023
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25. The oncologic risk of magnetic resonance imaging-targeted and systematic cores in patients treated with radical prostatectomy.
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Gaffney CD, Tin AL, Fainberg J, Fine S, Jibara G, Touijer K, Eastham J, Scardino P, Laudone V, Vickers AJ, and Ehdaie B
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- Male, Humans, Seminal Vesicles pathology, Retrospective Studies, Neoplasm Grading, Prostatectomy, Magnetic Resonance Imaging methods, Image-Guided Biopsy methods, Prostate diagnostic imaging, Prostate surgery, Prostate pathology, Prostatic Neoplasms diagnostic imaging, Prostatic Neoplasms surgery
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Background: Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI)-targeted prostate biopsy (MRI-biopsy) detects high-Grade Group (GG) prostate cancers not identified by systematic biopsy (S-biopsy). However, questions have been raised whether cancers detected by MRI-biopsy and S-biopsy, grade-for-grade, are of equivalent oncologic risk. The authors evaluated the relative oncologic risk of GG diagnosed by S-biopsy and MRI-biopsy., Methods: This was a retrospective analysis of all patients who had both MRI-biopsy and S-biopsy and underwent with prostatectomy (2014-2022) at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center. Three logistic regression models were used with adverse pathology as the primary outcome (primary pattern 4, any pattern 5, seminal vesicle invasion, or lymph node involvement). The first model included the presurgery prostate-specific antigen level, the number of positive and negative S-biopsy cores, S-biopsy GG, and MRI-biopsy GG. The second model excluded MRI-biopsy GG to obtain the average risk based on S-biopsy GG. The third model excluded S-biopsy GG to obtain the risk based on MRI-biopsy GG. A secondary analysis using Cox regression evaluated the 12-month risk of biochemical recurrence., Results: In total, 991 patients were identified, including 359 (36%) who had adverse pathology. MRI-biopsy GG influenced oncologic risk compared with S-biopsy GG alone (p < .001). However, if grade was discordant between biopsies, then the risk was intermediate between grades. For example, the average risk of advanced pathology for patients who had GG2 and GG3 on S-biopsy was 19% and 66%, respectively, but the average risk was 47% for patients who had GG2 on S-biopsy and patients who had GG3 on MRI-biopsy. The equivalent estimates for 12-month biochemical recurrence were 5.8%, 15%, and 10%, respectively., Conclusions: The current findings cast doubt on the practice of defining risk group based on the highest GG. Because treatment algorithms depend fundamentally on GG, further research is urgently required to assess the oncologic risk of prostate tumors depending on detection technique., Plain Language Summary: Using magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) to help diagnose prostate cancer can help identify more high-grade cancers than using a systematic template biopsy alone. However, we do not know if high-grade cancers diagnosed with the help of an MRI are as dangerous to the patient as high-grade cancers diagnosed with a systematic biopsy. We examined all of our patients who had an MRI biopsy and a systematic biopsy and then had their prostates removed to find out if these patients had risk factors and signs of aggressive cancer (cancer that spread outside the prostate or was very high grade). We found that, if there was a difference in grade between the systematic biopsy and the MRI-targeted biopsy, the risk of aggressive cancer was between the two grades., (© 2023 American Cancer Society.)
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- 2023
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26. Patterns of immune equilibrium and escape in indolent and progressing tumors.
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Pandey A, Linxweiler M, Kuo F, Marti JL, Roman B, Ehdaie B, Vos JL, and Morris LGT
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- Humans, Neoplasms immunology, Tumor Escape
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By comparing indolent/slowly progressing with aggressive/rapidly progressing tumor types, Pandey et al. identify human evidence of immune equilibrium in indolent tumors and immune escape in progressing tumors, suggesting a link between these mechanisms and the epidemiologic phenomenon of overdiagnosis., Competing Interests: Declaration of interests All affiliations are listed on the title page of this manuscript. We, the authors and our immediate family members, have no financial interests to declare., (Copyright © 2023 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2023
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27. Thermal Partial Prostate Ablation for Intermediate- and High-risk Prostate Cancer: Con.
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Gaffney CD and Ehdaie B
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- Male, Humans, Prostate surgery, Prostatic Neoplasms surgery
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Thermal partial-gland ablation (TPGA) is a promising treatment option for patients with prostate cancer (PCa) that has an excellent side-effect profile. However, the literature on TPGA in high-risk PCa is not robust enough to discount the risk of undertreatment and understaging in this population. Future studies, especially with incorporation of advanced imaging to better select patients, are necessary to understand the safety and efficacy of TPGA in high-risk disease., (Copyright © 2023 European Association of Urology. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
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- 2023
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28. Outcomes of Grade Group 2 and 3 Prostate Cancer on Initial Versus Confirmatory Biopsy: Implications for Active Surveillance.
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Perera M, Jibara G, Tin AL, Haywood S, Sjoberg DD, Benfante NE, Carlsson SV, Eastham JA, Laudone V, Touijer KA, Fine S, Scardino PT, Vickers AJ, and Ehdaie B
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- Male, Humans, Biopsy, Neoplasm Grading, Prostate surgery, Prostate pathology, Watchful Waiting methods, Prostatic Neoplasms surgery, Prostatic Neoplasms diagnosis
- Abstract
Background: Active surveillance (AS) is recommended as the preferred treatment for men with low-risk disease. In order to optimize risk stratification and exclude undiagnosed higher-grade disease, most AS protocols recommend a confirmatory biopsy., Objective: We aimed to compare outcomes among men with grade group (GG) 2/3 prostate cancer on initial biopsy with those among men whose disease was initially GG1 but was upgraded to GG2/3 on confirmatory biopsy., Design, Setting, and Participants: We reviewed patients undergoing radical prostatectomy (RP) in two cohorts: "immediate RP group," with GG2/3 cancer on diagnostic biopsy, and "AS group," with GG1 cancer on initial biopsy that was upgraded to GG2/3 on confirmatory biopsy., Outcome Measurements and Statistical Analysis: Probabilities of biochemical recurrence (BCR) and salvage therapy were determined using multivariable Cox regression models with risk adjustment. Risks of adverse pathology at RP were also compared using logistic regression., Results and Limitations: The immediate RP group comprised 4009 patients and the AS group comprised 321 patients. The AS group had lower adjusted rates of adverse pathology (27% vs 35%, p = 0.003). BCR rates were lower in the AS group, although this did not reach conventional significance (hazard ratio [HR] 0.73, 95% confidence interval [CI] 0.50-1.06, p = 0.10) compared with the immediate RP group. Risk-adjusted 1- and 5-yr BCR rates were 4.6% (95% CI 3.0-6.5%) and 10.4% (95% CI 6.9-14%), respectively, for the AS group compared with 6.3% (95% CI 5.6-7.0%) and 20% (95% CI 19-22%), respectively, in the immediate RP group. A nonsignificant association was observed for salvage treatment-free survival favoring the AS group (HR 0.67, 95% CI 0.42, 1.06, p = 0.087)., Conclusions: We found that men with GG1 cancer who were upgraded on confirmatory biopsy tend to have less aggressive disease than men with the same grade found at initial biopsy. These results must be confirmed in larger series before recommendations can be made regarding a more conservative approach in men with upgraded pathology on surveillance biopsy., Patient Summary: We studied men with low-risk prostate cancer who were initially eligible for active surveillance but presented with more aggressive cancer on confirmatory biopsy. We found that outcomes for these men were better than the outcomes for those diagnosed initially with more serious cancer., (Copyright © 2022. Published by Elsevier B.V.)
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- 2023
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29. Protocol of a multicentre randomised controlled trial assessing transperineal prostate biopsy to reduce infectiouscomplications.
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Hu J, Zhu A, Vickers A, Allaf ME, Ehdaie B, Schaeffer A, Pavlovich C, Ross AE, Green DA, Wang G, Ginzburg S, Montgomery JS, George A, Graham JN, Ristau BT, Correa A, Shoag JE, Kowalczyk KJ, Zhang TR, and Schaeffer EM
- Subjects
- Male, Humans, Prospective Studies, Biopsy adverse effects, Biopsy methods, Rectum pathology, Image-Guided Biopsy adverse effects, Image-Guided Biopsy methods, Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic, Multicenter Studies as Topic, Prostate pathology, Prostatic Neoplasms diagnosis, Prostatic Neoplasms pathology
- Abstract
Introduction: Approximately one million prostate biopsies are performed annually in the USA, and most are performed using a transrectal approach under local anaesthesia. The risk of postbiopsy infection is increasing due to increasing antibiotic resistance of rectal flora. Single-centre studies suggest that a clean, percutaneous transperineal approach to prostate biopsy may have a lower risk of infection. To date, there is no high-level evidence comparing transperineal versus transrectal prostate biopsy. We hypothesise that transperineal versus transrectal prostate biopsy under local anaesthesia has a significantly lower risk of infection, similar pain/discomfort levels and comparable detection of non-low-grade prostate cancer., Methods and Analysis: We will perform a multicentre, prospective randomised clinical trial to compare transperineal versus transrectal prostate biopsy for elevated prostate-specific antigen in the first biopsy, prior negative biopsy and active surveillance biopsy setting. Prostate MRI will be performed prior to biopsy, and targeted biopsy will be conducted for suspicious MRI lesions in addition to systematic biopsy (12 cores). Approximately 1700 men will be recruited and randomised in a 1:1 ratio to transperineal versus transrectal biopsy. A streamlined design to collect data and to determine trial eligibility along with the two-stage consent process will be used to facilitate subject recruitment and retention. The primary outcome is postbiopsy infection, and secondary outcomes include other adverse events (bleeding, urinary retention), pain/discomfort/anxiety and critically, detection of non-low-grade (grade group ≥2) prostate cancer., Ethics and Dissemination: The Institutional Review Board of the Biomedical Research Alliance of New York approved the research protocol (protocol number #18-02-365, approved 20 April 2020). The results of the trial will be presented at scientific conferences and published in peer-reviewed medical journals., Trial Registration Number: NCT04815876., Competing Interests: Competing interests: None declared., (© Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2023. Re-use permitted under CC BY-NC. No commercial re-use. See rights and permissions. Published by BMJ.)
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- 2023
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30. Does a brief surgeon training in negotiation theory principles decrease rates of contralateral prophylactic mastectomy?
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Mamtani A, Sjoberg DD, Vincent A, Ehdaie B, Malhotra D, Vickers A, and Morrow M
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- Humans, Female, Middle Aged, Mastectomy, Negotiating, Prophylactic Mastectomy, Unilateral Breast Neoplasms surgery, Breast Neoplasms prevention & control, Breast Neoplasms surgery, Surgeons
- Abstract
Purpose: Despite the lack of any oncologic benefit, contralateral prophylactic mastectomy (CPM) use among women with unilateral breast cancer is increasing. This patient-driven trend is influenced by fear of recurrence and desire for peace of mind. Traditional educational strategies have been ineffective in reducing CPM rates. Here we employ training in negotiation theory strategies for counseling and determine the effect on CPM rates., Methods: In consecutive patients with unilateral breast cancer treated with mastectomy from 05/2017 to 12/2019, we examined CPM rates before and after a brief surgeon training in negotiation skills. This comprised a systematic framework for patient counseling utilizing early setting of the default option, leveraging social proof, and framing., Results: Among 2144 patients, 925 (43%) were treated pre-training and 744 (35%) post-training. Those treated in the 6-month transition period were excluded (n = 475, 22%). Median patient age was 50 years; most patients had T1-T2 (72%), N0 (73%), and estrogen receptor-positive (80%) tumors of ductal histology (72%). The CPM rate was 47% pre-training versus 48% post-training, with an adjusted difference of -3.7% (95% CI -9.4 to 2.1, p = 0.2). In a standardized self-assessment survey, all 15 surgeons reported a high baseline use of negotiation skills and no significant change in conversational difficulty with the structured approach., Conclusion: Brief surgeon training did not affect self-reported use of negotiation skills or reduce CPM rates. The choice of CPM is a highly individual decision influenced by patient values and decision styles. Further research to identify effective strategies to minimize surgical overtreatment with CPM is needed., (© 2023. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Science+Business Media, LLC, part of Springer Nature.)
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- 2023
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31. Patient Perceptions of a Decision Support Tool for Men with Localized Prostate Cancer.
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Austria M, Kimberlin C, Le T, Lynch KA, Ehdaie B, Atkinson TM, Vickers AJ, and Carlsson SV
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Purpose. To evaluate patient perceptions of a Web-based decision aid for the treatment of localized prostate cancer. Methods. We assessed patient perceptions of a multicomponent, Web-based decision aid with a preference elicitation/values clarification exercise using adaptive conjoint analysis, the generation of a summary report, and provision of information about localized prostate cancer treatment options. Using a think-aloud approach, we conducted 21 cognitive interviews with prostate cancer patients presented with the decision aid prior to seeing their urologist. Thematic content analysis was used to examine patient perceptions of the tool's components and content prior to engaging in shared decision making with their clinician. Results. Five themes were identified: 1) patients had some negative emotional reactions to the tool, pointing out what they perceived to be unnecessarily negative framing and language used; 2) patients were forced to stop and think about preferences while going through the tool and found this deliberation to be useful; 3) patients were confused by the tool; 4) patients tried to discern the intent of the conjoint analysis questions; and 5) there was a disconnect between patients' negative reactions while using the tool and a contrasting general satisfaction with the final "values profile" created by the tool. Conclusions. Studies are needed to explore the disconnect between patients' expressing negative reactions while going through some components of decision aids but satisfaction with the final output. In particular, we hypothesize that this effect might be explained by cognitive biases such as choice-supportive bias, hindsight bias, and the "IKEA effect." This is one of the first projects to elicit patient reactions while they were completing a decision aid, and we recommend further similar, qualitative postprocess evaluation studies., Highlights: We explored perceptions of a decision aid with education about localized prostate cancer treatment and preference elicitation using adaptive conjoint analysis.Patients found the tool useful but were also confused by it, tried to discern the intent of the questions, and expressed negative emotional reactions.In particular, there was a disconnect between patients' negative reactions while using the tool and general satisfaction with the final values profile generated by the tool, which is an area for future research., Competing Interests: The authors declared the following potential conflicts of interest with respect to the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article: Andrew J. Vickers is a co-inventor of the 4Kscore, a commercially available reflex test for predicting prostate biopsy. He receives royalties from sales of the test. He owns stock options in Opko, which offers the test. The remaining authors have nothing to disclose. The authors disclosed receipt of the following financial support for the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article: Financial support for this quality improvement project was provided by the Movember Foundation. The authors’ work on this article was supported through a National Institute of Health/National Cancer Institute Cancer Center Support Grant (P30-CA008748) to Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center. S.V.C. was further supported by a National Institutes of Health/National Cancer Institute Transition Career Development Award (K22-CA234400). The funding agreement ensured the authors’ independence in designing the project, interpreting the data, writing, and publishing the report. This work was previously presented at the Society for Medical Decision Making (SMDM) virtual meeting 2020., (© The Author(s) 2023.)
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- 2023
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32. Oncologic outcomes of patients with lymph node invasion at prostatectomy and post-prostatectomy biochemical persistence.
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Perera M, Lebdai S, Tin AL, Sjoberg DD, Benfante N, Beech BB, Alvim RG, Touijer AS, Jenjitranant P, Ehdaie B, Laudone VP, Eastham JA, Scardino PT, and Touijer KA
- Subjects
- Male, Humans, Lymphatic Metastasis pathology, Neoplasm Recurrence, Local pathology, Lymph Nodes pathology, Lymph Node Excision, Disease Progression, Prostatectomy methods, Retrospective Studies, Prostate-Specific Antigen, Prostatic Neoplasms pathology
- Abstract
Background: Pathologic nodal invasion at prostatectomy is frequently associated with persistently elevated prostate-specific antigen (PSA) and with increased risk of disease recurrence. Management strategies for these patients are poorly defined. We aimed to explore the long-term oncologic outcomes and patterns of disease progression., Methods: We included men treated between 2000 and 2017 who had lymph node invasion at radical prostatectomy and persistently detectable prostate-specific antigen post-prostatectomy. Postoperative imaging and management strategies were collated. Patterns of recurrence and probability of metastasis-free survival, prostate cancer-specific survival, and overall survival (OS) were assessed., Results: Among our cohort of 253 patients, 126 developed metastasis. Twenty-five had a positive scan within 6 months of surgery; of these, 15 (60%) had a nodal metastasis, 10 (40%) had a bone metastasis, and 4 (16%) had local recurrence. For metastasis-free survival, 5- and 10-year probabilities were 52% (95% CI 45%, 58%) and 37% (95% CI 28%, 46%), respectively. For prostate cancer-specific survival, 5- and 10-year probabilities were 89% (95% CI 84%, 93%) and 67% (95% CI 57%, 76%), respectively. A total of 221 patients proceeded to hormonal deprivation treatment alone. Ten patients received postoperative radiotherapy., Conclusions: Biochemical persistence in patients with lymph node invasion is associated with high risk of disease progression and reduced prostate cancer-specific survival. Management was hindered by the limitation of imaging modalities utilized during the study period in accurately detecting residual disease. Novel molecular imaging may improve staging and help design a therapeutic strategy adapted to patients' specific needs., (Copyright © 2022. Published by Elsevier Inc.)
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- 2023
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33. Long-term Health-related Quality of Life in Patients on Active Surveillance for Prostate Cancer: A Systematic Review.
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Thompson D, Bensley JG, Tempo J, Ehdaie B, Carlsson S, Eastham J, Bolton D, Perera M, and Papa N
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- Male, Humans, Watchful Waiting, Quality of Life, Prostatic Neoplasms surgery
- Abstract
Context: Active surveillance (AS) represents the preferred treatment option in patients with low-risk prostate cancer. Optimised patient selection has enabled more patients to be managed with AS for a longer time. Thus, there is growing interest in its effect on long-term quality of life compared with interventional management., Objective: To perform a systematic review evaluating the long-term patient-reported outcomes regarding mental health, and sexual and urinary function in patients on AS., Evidence Acquisition: We performed a systematic review in accordance with the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-analyses guidelines. We included series assessing validated patient-reported outcomes of health-related quality of life, and sexual and urinary function in AS patients followed up for at least 5 yr., Evidence Synthesis: Our search yielded 1854 citations, including 19 papers involving 3643 patients on AS, 14 651 patients receiving surgery or radiotherapy, and 2478 controls without prostate cancer. In ten studies, major differences were observed in sexual and urinary symptoms between groups, such as better sexual function and fewer irritative urinary symptoms in patients on AS, though overall functional outcomes were comparable. In all studies, health-related quality of life for patients on AS was better than, or similar to, that for patients who had undergone surgery or radiotherapy and comparable with that for individuals without cancer., Conclusions: We observed differences in specific functional outcomes between patients on AS and surgery or radiotherapy, ≥5 yr after treatment. Patients on AS reported good quality of life, similar to that in individuals without prostate cancer. AS should continue to be a recommended management strategy for appropriately selected patients., Patient Summary: Active surveillance is an accepted pathway for patients with low-risk localised prostate cancer. Previous literature has shown that it did not negatively affect short-term quality of life. This review finds that long-term quality of life for these patients is similar to that for people without prostate cancer., (Copyright © 2022 European Association of Urology. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
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- 2023
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34. Gene-based Confirmatory Germline Testing Following Tumor-only Sequencing of Prostate Cancer.
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Truong H, Breen K, Nandakumar S, Sjoberg DD, Kemel Y, Mehta N, Lenis AT, Reisz PA, Carruthers J, Benfante N, Joseph V, Khurram A, Gopalan A, Fine SW, Reuter VE, Vickers AJ, Birsoy O, Liu Y, Walsh M, Latham A, Mandelker D, Stadler ZK, Pietzak E, Ehdaie B, Touijer KA, Laudone VP, Slovin SF, Autio KA, Danila DC, Rathkopf DE, Eastham JA, Chen Y, Morris MJ, Offit K, Solit DB, Scher HI, Abida W, Robson ME, and Carlo MI
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- Male, Humans, Genetic Testing, Sequence Analysis, Genomics, Genetic Predisposition to Disease, Germ-Line Mutation, Prostatic Neoplasms genetics
- Abstract
Background: Tumor-only genomic profiling is an important tool in therapeutic management of men with prostate cancer. Since clinically actionable germline variants may be reflected in tumor profiling, it is critical to identify which variants have a higher risk of being germline in origin to better counsel patients and prioritize genetic testing., Objective: To determine when variants found on tumor-only sequencing of prostate cancers should prompt confirmatory germline testing., Design, Setting, and Participants: Men with prostate cancer who underwent both tumor and germline sequencing at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center from January 1, 2015 to January 31, 2020 were evaluated., Outcome Measurements and Statistical Analysis: Tumor and germline profiles were analyzed for pathogenic and likely pathogenic ("pathogenic") variants in 60 moderate- or high-penetrance genes associated with cancer predisposition. The germline probability (germline/germline + somatic) of a variant was calculated for each gene. Clinical and pathologic factors were analyzed as potential modifiers of germline probability., Results and Limitations: Of the 1883 patients identified, 1084 (58%) had a somatic or germline pathogenic variant in one of 60 cancer susceptibility genes, and of them, 240 (22%) had at least one germline variant. Overall, the most frequent variants were in TP53, PTEN, APC, BRCA2, RB1, ATM, and CHEK2. Variants in TP53, PTEN, or RB1 were identified in 746 (40%) patients and were exclusively somatic. Variants with the highest germline probabilities were in PALB2 (69%), MITF (62%), HOXB13 (60%), CHEK2 (55%), BRCA1 (55%), and BRCA2 (47%), and the overall germline probability of a variant in any DNA damage repair gene was 40%. Limitations were that most of the men included in the cohort had metastatic disease, and different thresholds for pathogenicity exist for somatic and germline variants., Conclusions: Of patients with pathogenic variants found on prostate tumor sequencing, 22% had clinically actionable germline variants, for which the germline probabilities varied widely by gene. Our results provide an evidenced-based clinical framework to prioritize referral to genetic counseling following tumor-only sequencing., Patient Summary: Patients with advanced prostate cancer are recommended to have germline genetic testing. Genetic sequencing of a patient's prostate tumor may also identify certain gene variants that are inherited. We found that patients who had variants in certain genes, such as ones that function in DNA damage repair, identified in their prostate tumor sequencing, had a high risk for having an inherited cancer syndrome., (Copyright © 2022 European Association of Urology. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
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- 2023
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35. A Novel Expert Coaching Model in Urology, Aimed at Accelerating the Learning Curve in Robotic Prostatectomy.
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Fainberg J, Vanden Berg RNW, Chesnut G, Coleman JA, Donahue T, Ehdaie B, Goh AC, Laudone VP, Lee T, Pyon J, Scardino PT, and Smith RC
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- Humans, Male, Learning Curve, Prostatectomy education, Clinical Competence, Mentoring methods, Urology education, Robotics, Robotic Surgical Procedures education, Internship and Residency
- Abstract
Introduction/background: The surgical residency model assumes that upon completion, a surgeon is ready to practice and grow independently. However, many surgeons fail to improve after reaching proficiency, which in certain instances has correlated with worse clinical outcomes. Coaching addresses this problem and furthers surgeons' education post-residency. Currently, surgical coaching programs focus on medical students and residents, and have been shown to improve residents' and medical students' technical and non-technical abilities. Coaching programs also increase the accuracy of residents, fellows, and attendings in self-assessing their surgical ability. Despite the potential benefits, coaching remains underutilized and poorly studied. We developed an expert-led, face-to-face, video-based surgical coaching program at a tertiary medical center among specialized attending surgeons. Our goal was to evaluate the feasibility of such a program, measure surgeons' attitudes towards internal peer coaching, determine whether surgeons found the sessions valuable and educational, and to subjectively self-assess changes in operative technique., Methods/materials: Surgeons who perform robot-assisted laparoscopic prostatectomies were chosen and grouped by number of cases completed: junior (<100 cases), intermediate (100-500 cases), and senior (>500 cases). Surgeons were scheduled for 3 1-hour coaching sessions 1-2 months apart (February-October 2019), meeting individually with the coach (PS), an expert Urologic Oncologist with thousands of cases of experience performing radical prostatectomy. He received training on coaching methodology prior to beginning the coaching program. Before each session, surgeons selected 1 of their recent intraoperative videos to review. During sessions, the coach led discussion on topics chosen by the surgeon (i.e. neurovascular bundle dissection, apical dissection, bladder neck); together, they developed goals to achieve before the next session. Subsequent sessions included presentation and discussion of a case occurring subsequent to the prior session. Sessions were coded by discussion topics and analyzed based on level of experience. Surgeons completed a survey evaluating the experience., Results: All 6 surgeons completed 3 sessions. Five surgeons completed the survey; most respondents evaluated themselves as having improved in desired areas and feeling more confident performing the discussed steps of the operation. Discussed surgical principles varied by experience group; when subjectively quantifying the difficulty of surgical steps, the more difficult steps were discussed by the higher experience groups compared to the junior surgeons. The senior surgeons also focused more on oncologic potency, continence outcomes, and more theory-driven questions while the junior surgeons tended to focus more on anatomic and technique-based questions such as tissue handling and the use of cautery and clips. Overall, the surgeons thought this program provoked critical discussion and subsequently modified their technique, and "agreed" or "strongly agreed" that they would seek further sessions., Conclusions: Surgical coaching at a large medical center is not only feasible but was rated positively by surgeons across all levels of experience. Coaching led to subjective self-improvement and increased self-confidence among most surgeons. Surgeons also felt that this program offered a safe space to acquire new skills and think critically after finishing residency/fellowship. Themes discussed and takeaways from the sessions varied based on surgeon experience level. While further research is needed to more objectively quantify the impact coaching has on surgeon metrics and patient outcomes, the results of this study supports the initial "proof-of-concept" of peer-based surgical coaching and its potential benefits in accelerating the learning curve for surgeons' post-residency., (Copyright © 2022 Association of Program Directors in Surgery. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2022
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36. Social ecological influences on treatment decision-making in men diagnosed with low risk, localised prostate cancer.
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McIntosh M, Opozda MJ, Short CE, Galvão DA, Tutino R, Diefenbach M, Ehdaie B, and Nelson C
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- Humans, Male, Qualitative Research, Decision Making, Shared, Decision Making, Prostatic Neoplasms therapy
- Abstract
Objective: Individuals diagnosed with low risk, localised prostate cancer (PCa) face a difficult decision between active surveillance (AS) and definitive treatment. We aimed to explore perceived influences on treatment decision-making from the patient and partner's perspectives., Methods: Patients (and partners) who met AS criteria and had chosen their treatment were recruited. Semi-structured individual interviews were conducted via telephone to explore experiences of diagnosis, impact on patient lifestyle, experiences with physicians, treatment preferences/choice, treatment information understanding and needs, and overall decision-making process. Interviews were audio recorded, transcribed verbatim, and analysed using Reflexive Thematic Analysis., Results: Twenty-four male patients (18 chose AS) and 12 female partners participated. Five themes relating to social-ecological influences on treatment choice were identified: (1) partner support and direct influence on patient treatment choice, (2) patient and partner vicarious experiences may influence treatment decisions, (3) the influence of the patient's life circumstances, (4) disclosing to wider social networks: friends, family, and co-workers, and (5) the importance of a good relationship and experience with physicians. Additionally, two themes were identified relating to information patients and partners received about the treatment options during their decision-making process., Conclusions: A range of individual and social influences on treatment decision-making were reported. Physicians providing treatment recommendations should consider and discuss the patient and partner's existing beliefs and treatment preferences and encourage shared decision-making. Further research on treatment decision-making of partnered and non-partnered PCa patients is required. We recommend research considers social ecological factors across the personal, interpersonal, community, and policy levels., (© 2022 The Authors. European Journal of Cancer Care published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
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- 2022
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37. Tempering optimism for MRI-guided focused ultrasound therapy - Authors' reply.
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Ehdaie B, Sonn GA, and Ghanouni P
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- Humans, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Hyperthermia, Induced
- Abstract
Competing Interests: The authors’ declarations of interest remain the same as in the original Article.
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- 2022
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38. Association of Family History of Cancer with Clinical and Pathological Outcomes for Prostate Cancer Patients on Active Surveillance.
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Jibara GA, Perera M, Vertosick EA, Sjoberg DD, Vickers A, Scardino PT, Eastham JA, Laudone VP, Touijer K, Lin X, Carlo MI, and Ehdaie B
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- Humans, Male, Neoplasm Grading, Prostate-Specific Antigen, Prostatectomy, Prostatic Neoplasms pathology, Watchful Waiting
- Abstract
Purpose: The impact of germline mutations associated with hereditary cancer syndromes in patients on active surveillance (AS) for prostate cancer is poorly defined. We examined the association between family history of prostate cancer (FHP) or family history of cancer (FHC) and risk of progression or adverse pathology at radical prostatectomy (RP) in patients on AS., Materials and Methods: Patients on AS at a single tertiary-care center between 2000-2019 were categorized by family history. Disease progression was defined as an increase in Gleason grade on biopsy. Adverse pathology was defined as upgrading/upstaging at RP. Multivariable Cox and logistic regression models were used to assess association between family history and time to progression or adverse pathology, respectively., Results: Among 3,211 evaluable patients, 669 (21%) had FHP, 34 (1%) had FHC and 95 (3%) had both; 753 progressed on AS and 481 underwent RP. FHP was associated with increased risk of progression (HR 1.31; 95% CI, 1.11-1.55; p=0.002) but FHC (HR 0.67; 95% CI, 0.30-1.50; p=0.3) or family history of both (HR 1.22; 95% CI, 0.81-1.85; p=0.3) were not. FHP, FHC or both were not associated with adverse pathology at RP (p >0.4)., Conclusions: While FHP was associated with an increased risk of progression on AS, wide confidence intervals render this outcome of unclear clinical significance. FHC was not associated with risk of progression on AS. In the absence of known genetically defined hereditary cancer syndrome, we suggest FHP and/or FHC should not be used as a sole trigger to preclude patients from enrolling on AS.
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- 2022
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39. Oncologic Outcomes of Total Length Gleason Pattern 4 on Biopsy in Men with Grade Group 2 Prostate Cancer.
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Perera M, Assel MJ, Benfante NE, Vickers AJ, Reuter VE, Carlsson S, Laudone V, Touijer KA, Eastham JA, Scardino PT, Fine SW, and Ehdaie B
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- Biopsy, Humans, Male, Neoplasm Grading, Neoplasm Recurrence, Local pathology, Prostate pathology, Prostate surgery, Prostate-Specific Antigen, Prostatectomy, Prostatic Neoplasms pathology
- Abstract
Purpose: Gleason Score 7 prostate cancer comprises a wide spectrum of disease risk, and precise substratification is paramount. Our group previously demonstrated that the total length of Gleason pattern (GP) 4 is a better predictor than %GP4 for adverse pathological outcomes at radical prostatectomy. We aimed to determine the association of GP4 length on prostate biopsy with post-prostatectomy oncologic outcomes., Materials and Methods: We compared 4 GP4 quantification methods-including maximum %GP4 in any single core, overall %GP4, total length GP4 (mm) across all cores and length GP4 (mm) in the highest volume core-for prediction of biochemical recurrence-free survival after radical prostatectomy using multivariable Cox proportional hazards regression., Results: A total of 457 men with grade group 2 prostate cancer on biopsy subsequently underwent radical prostatectomy. The 3-year biochemical recurrence-free survival probability was 85% (95% CI 81-88). On multivariable analysis, all 4 GP4 quantification methods were associated with biochemical recurrence-maximum %GP4 (HR=1.30; 95% CI 1.07-1.59; p=0.009), overall %GP4 (HR=1.61; 95% CI 1.21-2.15; p=0.001), total length GP4 (HR=2.48; 95% CI 1.36-4.52; p=0.003) and length GP4 in highest core (HR=1.32; 95% CI 1.11-1.57; p=0.001). However, we were unable to identify differences between methods of quantification with a relatively low event rate., Conclusions: These findings support further studies on GP4 quantification in addition to the ratio of GP3 and GP4 to classify prostate cancer risk. Research should also be conducted on whether GP4 quantification could provide a surrogate endpoint for disease progression for trials in active surveillance.
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- 2022
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40. MRI-guided focused ultrasound focal therapy for patients with intermediate-risk prostate cancer: a phase 2b, multicentre study.
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Ehdaie B, Tempany CM, Holland F, Sjoberg DD, Kibel AS, Trinh QD, Durack JC, Akin O, Vickers AJ, Scardino PT, Sperling D, Wong JYC, Yuh B, Woodrum DA, Mynderse LA, Raman SS, Pantuck AJ, Schiffman MH, McClure TD, Sonn GA, and Ghanouni P
- Subjects
- Aged, Humans, Magnetic Resonance Imaging methods, Male, Middle Aged, Prospective Studies, Prostate pathology, Prostate-Specific Antigen, Prostatic Neoplasms diagnostic imaging, Prostatic Neoplasms pathology, Prostatic Neoplasms therapy
- Abstract
Background: Men with grade group 2 or 3 prostate cancer are often considered ineligible for active surveillance; some patients with grade group 2 prostate cancer who are managed with active surveillance will have early disease progression requiring radical therapy. This study aimed to investigate whether MRI-guided focused ultrasound focal therapy can safely reduce treatment burden for patients with localised grade group 2 or 3 intermediate-risk prostate cancer., Methods: In this single-arm, multicentre, phase 2b study conducted at eight health-care centres in the USA, we recruited men aged 50 years and older with unilateral, MRI-visible, primary, intermediate-risk, previously untreated prostate adenocarcinoma (prostate-specific antigen ≤20 ng/mL, grade group 2 or 3; tumour classification ≤T2) confirmed on combined biopsy (combining MRI-targeted and systematic biopsies). MRI-guided focused ultrasound energy, sequentially titrated to temperatures sufficient for tissue ablation (about 60-70°C), was delivered to the index lesion and a planned margin of 5 mm or more of normal tissue, using real-time magnetic resonance thermometry for intraoperative monitoring. Co-primary outcomes were oncological outcomes (absence of grade group 2 and higher cancer in the treated area at 6-month and 24-month combined biopsy; when 24-month biopsy data were not available and grade group 2 or higher cancer had occurred in the treated area at 6 months, the 6-month biopsy results were included in the final analysis) and safety (adverse events up to 24 months) in all patients enrolled in the study. This study is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov, NCT01657942, and is no longer recruiting., Findings: Between May 4, 2017, and Dec 21, 2018, we assessed 194 patients for eligibility and treated 101 patients with MRI-guided focused ultrasound. Median age was 63 years (IQR 58-67) and median concentration of prostate-specific antigen was 5·7 ng/mL (IQR 4·2-7·5). Most cancers were grade group 2 (79 [78%] of 101). At 24 months, 78 (88% [95% CI 79-94]) of 89 men had no evidence of grade group 2 or higher prostate cancer in the treated area. No grade 4 or grade 5 treatment-related adverse events were reported, and only one grade 3 adverse event (urinary tract infection) was reported. There were no treatment-related deaths., Interpretation: 24-month biopsy outcomes show that MRI-guided focused ultrasound focal therapy is safe and effectively treats grade group 2 or 3 prostate cancer. These results support focal therapy for select patients and its use in comparative trials to determine if a tissue-preserving approach is effective in delaying or eliminating the need for radical whole-gland treatment in the long term., Funding: Insightec and the National Cancer Institute., Competing Interests: Declaration of interests BE attends the medical advisory board of Insightec as an unpaid consultant, and has previously received consulting funds from Myriad Genetics. CMT reports consulting funds from Profound. DDS reports consulting funds from OPKO Health and Steba. ASK is on the medical advisory board of Insightec, Profound, and Janssen, and has received consulting funds from Advantagene DSMC, Bristol Myers Squibb, Merck, Bayer, and General Electric. Q-DT reports consulting funds from Astellas, Bayer, Intuitive Surgical, and Janssen. JCD is the Chief Clinical Officer for Ajax Health and Cordis Accelco and has equity interests in Cordis; is on the advisory board and has ownership or equity interests in Serpex Health and Adient Medical; and serves as the past chair of the Society of Interventional Radiology Foundation. OA has ownership or equity interests in Ezra AI. AJV is named on a patent for a statistical method to detect prostate cancer that has been commercialised by OPKO Health (from which he receives royalties and stock options) and has received consulting funds from Insightec and Steba. PTS is named on a patent for a statistical method to detect prostate cancer that has been commercialised by OPKO Health (from which he receives royalties and stock options) and chairs the medical advisory board of Insightec as an unpaid consultant. DS is the medical director and founder of Sperling Prostate Center, a private facility for prostate cancer treatment in Delray Beach, FL, USA. LAM has collaborative and research agreements with Philips Healthcare and Biobot Surgical. GAS is on the medical advisory board of miR Scientific. PG is on the medical advisory boards of Insightec and SonALASense and has ownership or equity interests in SonALASense. All other authors declare no competing interests., (Copyright © 2022 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
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- 2022
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41. Active Surveillance for Men Younger than 60 Years or with Intermediate-risk Localized Prostate Cancer. Descriptive Analyses of Clinical Practice in the Movember GAP3 Initiative.
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Remmers S, Helleman J, Nieboer D, Trock B, Hyndman ME, Moore CM, Gnanapragasam V, Shiong Lee L, Elhage O, Klotz L, Carroll P, Pickles T, Bjartell A, Robert G, Frydenberg M, Sugimoto M, Ehdaie B, Morgan TM, Rubio-Briones J, Semjonow A, Bangma CH, and Roobol MJ
- Abstract
Background: Active surveillance (AS) is a management option for men diagnosed with low-risk prostate cancer. Opinions differ on whether it is safe to include young men (≤60 yr) or men with intermediate-risk disease., Objective: To assess whether reasons for discontinuation, treatment choice after AS, and adverse pathology at radical prostatectomy (RP; N1, or ≥GG3, or ≥pT3) differ for men ≤60 yr or those with European Association of Urology (EAU) intermediate-risk disease from those for men >60 yr or those with EAU low-risk disease., Design Setting and Participants: We analyzed data from 5411 men ≤60 yr and 14 959 men >60 yr, 14 064 men with low-risk cancer, and 2441 men with intermediate-risk cancer, originating from the GAP3 database (21 169 patients/27 cohorts worldwide)., Outcome Measurements and Statistical Analysis: Cumulative incidence curves were used to estimate the rates of AS discontinuation and treatment choice., Results and Limitations: The probability of discontinuation of AS due to disease progression at 5 yr was similar for men aged ≤60 yr (22%) and those >60 yr (25%), as well as those of any age with low-risk disease (24%) versus those with intermediate-risk disease (24%). Men with intermediate-risk disease are more prone to discontinue AS without evidence of progression than men with low-risk disease (at 1/5 yr: 5.9%/14.2% vs 2.0%/8.8%). Adverse pathology at RP was observed in 32% of men ≤60 yr compared with 36% of men >60 yr ( p = 0.029), and in 34% with low-risk disease compared with 40% with intermediate-risk disease ( p = 0.048)., Conclusions: Our descriptive analysis of AS practices worldwide showed that the risk of progression during AS is similar across the age and risk groups studied. The proportion of adverse pathology was higher among men >60 yr than among men ≤60 yr. These results suggest that men ≤60 yr and those with EAU intermediate-risk disease should not be excluded from opting for AS as initial management., Patient Summary: Data from 27 international centers reflecting daily clinical practice suggest that younger men or men with intermediate-risk prostate cancer do not hold greater risk for disease progression during active surveillance., (© 2022 The Author(s).)
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- 2022
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42. Editorial: Special issue on focal therapy: Updating our knowledge.
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Ehdaie B and Sanchez-Salas R
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- 2022
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43. Comparison of US Cancer Center Recommendations for Prostate Cancer Screening With Evidence-Based Guidelines.
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Koh ES, Lee AYJ, Ehdaie B, and Marti JL
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- Humans, Male, Mass Screening, Prostate-Specific Antigen, Early Detection of Cancer, Prostatic Neoplasms diagnosis
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- 2022
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44. Independent validation of a pre-specified four-kallikrein marker model for prediction of adverse pathology and biochemical recurrence.
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Rasmussen M, Fredsøe J, Tin AL, Vickers AJ, Ulhøi B, Borre M, Eastham J, Ehdaie B, Guillonneau B, Laudone V, Scardino PT, Touijer K, Sørensen KD, and Lilja H
- Subjects
- Humans, Male, Neoplasm Grading, Prostate pathology, Prostate-Specific Antigen, Prostatectomy, Kallikreins, Prostatic Neoplasms pathology, Prostatic Neoplasms surgery
- Abstract
Background: Accurate markers for prostate cancer (PC) risk stratification could aid decision-making for initial management strategies. The 4Kscore has an undefined role in predicting outcomes after radical prostatectomy (RP)., Methods: We included 1476 patients with 4Kscore measured prior to RP at two institutions. The 4Kscore was assessed for prediction of adverse pathology at RP and biochemical recurrence (BCR) relative to a clinical model. We pre-specified that all analyses would be assessed in biopsy Grade Group 1 (GG1) or 2 (GG2) PC patients, separately., Results: The 4Kscore increased discrimination for adverse pathology in all patients (delta area under the receiver operative curve (AUC) 0.009, 95% confidence interval (CI) 0.002, 0.016; clinical model AUC 0.767), driven by GG1 (delta AUC 0.040, 95% CI 0.006, 0.073) rather than GG2 patients (delta AUC 0.005, 95% CI -0.012, 0.021). Adding 4Kscore improved prediction of BCR in all patients (delta C-index 0.014, 95% CI 0.007, 0.021; preop-BCR nomogram C-index 0.738), again with larger changes in GG1 than in GG2., Conclusions: This study validates prior investigations on the use of 4Kscore in men with biopsy-confirmed PC. Men with GG1 PC and a high 4Kscore may benefit from additional testing to guide treatment selection. Further research is warranted regarding the value of the 4Kscore in men with biopsy GG2 PC., (© 2021. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Nature Limited.)
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- 2022
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45. Have urinary function outcomes after radical prostatectomy improved over the past decade?
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Clements MB, Gmelich CC, Vertosick EA, Hu JC, Sandhu JS, Scardino PT, Eastham JA, Laudone VP, Touijer KA, Coleman JA, Vickers AJ, and Ehdaie B
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- Humans, Male, Prostate, Laparoscopy, Prostatectomy adverse effects, Prostatectomy methods, Urinary Incontinence epidemiology, Urinary Incontinence etiology
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Background: Changes in surgical technique and postoperative care that target improvements in functional outcomes are widespread in the literature. Radical prostatectomy (RP) is one such procedure that has seen multiple advances over the past decade. The objective of this study was to leverage RP as an index case to determine whether practice changes over time produced observable improvements in patient-reported outcomes., Methods: This study analyzed patients undergoing RP by experienced surgeons at a tertiary care center with prospectively maintained patient-reported outcome data from 2008 to 2019. Four patient-reported urinary function outcomes at 6 and 12 months after RP were defined with a validated instrument: good urinary function (domain score ≥ 17), no incontinence (0 pads per day), social continence (≤1 pad per day), and severe incontinence (≥3 pads per day). Multivariable logistic regressions evaluated changes in outcomes based on the surgical date., Results: Among 3945 patients meeting the inclusion criteria, excellent urinary outcomes were reported throughout the decade but without consistent observable improvements over time. Specifically, there were no improvements in good urinary function at 12 months (P = .087) based on the surgical date, and there were countervailing effects on no incontinence (worsening; P = .005) versus severe incontinence (improving; P = .003). Neither approach (open, laparoscopic, or robotic), nor nerve sparing, nor membranous urethral length mediated changes in outcomes., Conclusions: In a decade with multiple advances in surgical and postoperative care, there was evidence of improvements in severe incontinence, but no measurable improvements across 3 other urinary outcomes. Although worsening disease factors could contribute to the stable observed outcomes, a more systematic approach to evaluating techniques and implementing patient selection and postoperative care advances is needed., Lay Summary: Although there have been advances in radical prostatectomy over the past decade, consistent observable improvements in postoperative incontinence were not reported by patients. To improve urinary function outcomes beyond the current high standard, the approach to studying innovations in surgical technique needs to be changed, and further development of other aspects of prostatectomy care is needed., (© 2021 American Cancer Society.)
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- 2022
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46. Characterization of Symptoms after Radical Prostatectomy and Their Relation to Postoperative Complications.
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Clements MB, Tin AL, Estes CL, Jibara G, Desai PK, Ehdaie B, Touijer KA, Scardino PT, Eastham JA, Assel MJ, Vickers AJ, Simon BA, and Laudone VP
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- Aged, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Postoperative Complications diagnosis, Postoperative Complications etiology, Prostate pathology, Prostate surgery, Prostatectomy methods, Prostatic Neoplasms pathology, Retrospective Studies, Risk Assessment methods, Severity of Illness Index, Time Factors, Laparoscopy adverse effects, Postoperative Complications epidemiology, Prostatectomy adverse effects, Prostatic Neoplasms surgery, Robotic Surgical Procedures adverse effects
- Abstract
Purpose: Many patients will experience symptoms in the initial days after radical prostatectomy (RP), but early patient-reported symptoms have not been well characterized. Our objective was to illustrate the pattern of symptoms experienced after RP and the relation of severe symptoms to postoperative complications., Materials and Methods: In 2016, electronic patient-reported symptom monitoring began at our institution's ambulatory surgery center. We retrospectively reviewed patients treated with minimally invasive RP who were sent a daily questionnaire completed using a web interface until postoperative day 10. Severe symptoms automatically generate a "yellow alert," which messages the clinic, while very severe symptoms generate a "red alert," additionally prompting the patient to call. We summarized rates of moderate-to-very severe symptoms and fit local polynomial regressions. We compared rates of 30-day or 90-day complications (grade ≥2) based on the presence of alert symptoms., Results: Of 2,266 men undergoing RP, 1,942 (86%) completed surveys. Among moderate-to-very severe symptom levels, pain (72%) and dyspnea (11%) were most common. Pain, nausea and dyspnea consistently decreased over time; fever and vomiting had a flat pattern. In patients experiencing red-alert symptoms, we observed a higher risk of 30-day complications, but rates were low and differences between groups were nonsignificant (2.9% vs 1.9%; difference 1.1%; 95% CI -1.3-3.5; p=0.3). Results were similar examining 90-day complications., Conclusions: While symptoms are common after RP, substantial improvements occur over the first 10 days. Severe or very severe symptoms conferred at most a small absolute increase in complication risk, which should be reassuring to patients and clinicians.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Genetic Factors Associated with Prostate Cancer Conversion from Active Surveillance to Treatment.
- Author
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Jiang Y, Meyers TJ, Emeka AA, Cooley LF, Cooper PR, Lancki N, Helenowski I, Kachuri L, Lin DW, Stanford JL, Newcomb LF, Kolb S, Finelli A, Fleshner NE, Komisarenko M, Eastham JA, Ehdaie B, Benfante N, Logothetis CJ, Gregg JR, Perez CA, Garza S, Kim J, Marks LS, Delfin M, Barsa D, Vesprini D, Klotz LH, Loblaw A, Mamedov A, Goldenberg SL, Higano CS, Spillane M, Wu E, Carter HB, Pavlovich CP, Mamawala M, Landis T, Carroll PR, Chan JM, Cooperberg MR, Cowan JE, Morgan TM, Siddiqui J, Martin R, Klein EA, Brittain K, Gotwald P, Barocas DA, Dallmer JR, Gordetsky JB, Steele P, Kundu SD, Stockdale J, Roobol MJ, Venderbos LDF, Sanda MG, Arnold R, Patil D, Evans CP, Dall'Era MA, Vij A, Costello AJ, Chow K, Corcoran NM, Rais-Bahrami S, Phares C, Scherr DS, Flynn T, Karnes RJ, Koch M, Dhondt CR, Nelson JB, McBride D, Cookson MS, Stratton KL, Farriester S, Hemken E, Stadler WM, Pera T, Banionyte D, Bianco FJ Jr, Lopez IH, Loeb S, Taneja SS, Byrne N, Amling CL, Martinez A, Boileau L, Gaylis FD, Petkewicz J, Kirwen N, Helfand BT, Xu J, Scholtens DM, Catalona WJ, and Witte JS
- Abstract
Men diagnosed with low-risk prostate cancer (PC) are increasingly electing active surveillance (AS) as their initial management strategy. While this may reduce the side effects of treatment for prostate cancer, many men on AS eventually convert to active treatment. PC is one of the most heritable cancers, and genetic factors that predispose to aggressive tumors may help distinguish men who are more likely to discontinue AS. To investigate this, we undertook a multi-institutional genome-wide association study (GWAS) of 5,222 PC patients and 1,139 other patients from replication cohorts, all of whom initially elected AS and were followed over time for the potential outcome of conversion from AS to active treatment. In the GWAS we detected 18 variants associated with conversion, 15 of which were not previously associated with PC risk. With a transcriptome-wide association study (TWAS), we found two genes associated with conversion ( MAST3 , p = 6.9×10
-7 and GAB2 , p = 2.0×10-6 ). Moreover, increasing values of a previously validated 269-variant genetic risk score (GRS) for PC was positively associated with conversion (e.g., comparing the highest to the two middle deciles gave a hazard ratio [HR] = 1.13; 95% Confidence Interval [CI]= 0.94-1.36); whereas, decreasing values of a 36-variant GRS for prostate-specific antigen (PSA) levels were positively associated with conversion (e.g., comparing the lowest to the two middle deciles gave a HR = 1.25; 95% CI, 1.04-1.50). These results suggest that germline genetics may help inform and individualize the decision of AS-or the intensity of monitoring on AS- versus treatment for the initial management of patients with low-risk PC., Competing Interests: Declaration of Interests The authors declare no competing interests.- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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