Top Banner
Prostate Cancer Screening 2012 Paul L. Crispen, MD Department of Surgery University of Kentucky
41

Prostate Cancer Screening 2012 Paul L. Crispen, MD Department of Surgery University of Kentucky.

Dec 24, 2015

Download

Documents

Joy Simpson
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: Prostate Cancer Screening 2012 Paul L. Crispen, MD Department of Surgery University of Kentucky.

Prostate Cancer Screening 2012

Paul L. Crispen, MDDepartment of SurgeryUniversity of Kentucky

Page 2: Prostate Cancer Screening 2012 Paul L. Crispen, MD Department of Surgery University of Kentucky.

Conflicts of Interest

• I am a Urologist

• I have a family member who died of prostate cancer

Page 3: Prostate Cancer Screening 2012 Paul L. Crispen, MD Department of Surgery University of Kentucky.

Critical Questions

• Should all men be screened?

• Who should be offered screening?

• How should men be screened?

Page 4: Prostate Cancer Screening 2012 Paul L. Crispen, MD Department of Surgery University of Kentucky.

Outline

• Purpose of screening

• Method of screening

• Contemporary screening trials

• Current Guidelines

• Questions

Page 5: Prostate Cancer Screening 2012 Paul L. Crispen, MD Department of Surgery University of Kentucky.

Purpose of Screening

• Early detection of potentially lethal malignancy

• Early treatment will confer advantages over treatment of clinically detected malignancy

Page 6: Prostate Cancer Screening 2012 Paul L. Crispen, MD Department of Surgery University of Kentucky.

Purpose of Screening

• Earlier detection of potentially lethal malignancy

Page 7: Prostate Cancer Screening 2012 Paul L. Crispen, MD Department of Surgery University of Kentucky.

Purpose of Screening

• Early treatment will confer advantages over treatment of clinically detected malignancy

Five year survival

Page 8: Prostate Cancer Screening 2012 Paul L. Crispen, MD Department of Surgery University of Kentucky.

Method of Screening

• Digital Rectal Exam– Subjective

• Serum Prostate Specific Antigen (PSA)– Not specific

Page 9: Prostate Cancer Screening 2012 Paul L. Crispen, MD Department of Surgery University of Kentucky.

What causes a change in PSA?

• BPH• Prostate Cancer• Prostate inflammation/infection - prostatitis• Medications: e.g. 5-alpha reductase’s, CAM• Other causes:

– Trauma/Instrumentation (e.g. cystoscopy, biopsy)

– Radiation– Ejaculation and DRE (variable, inconsistent)– PSA assay

Page 10: Prostate Cancer Screening 2012 Paul L. Crispen, MD Department of Surgery University of Kentucky.

Prostate Specific Antigen (PSA)

• PSA <4 ng/mL considered “normal” • PSA 4-10 ng/mL assoc. with 22-

30% positive biopsy rate

• PSA >10 ng/mL assoc. with 66% positive biopsy rate

Oesterling J, et al. Cancer: Principles & Practice of Oncology. 5th ed. 1997;1322-1386.Brawer MK. CA Cancer J Clin. 1999;49:264-281.

Page 11: Prostate Cancer Screening 2012 Paul L. Crispen, MD Department of Surgery University of Kentucky.

Prostate Cancer in low PSA

PSA levelPrevalence of Prostate Cancer

High-Grade Disease

3.1 - 4.0 26.9% 25.0%

2.1 - 3.0 23.9% 19.1%

1.1 - 2.0 17.0% 11.8%

0.6 - 1.0 10.1% 10.0%

<0.5 6.6% 12.5%

Thompson et al, JAMA 294:66-70, 2005.

Thompson et al, NEJM 350:2239-46, 2004.

Page 12: Prostate Cancer Screening 2012 Paul L. Crispen, MD Department of Surgery University of Kentucky.

Prostate Cancer Screening Trials

Page 13: Prostate Cancer Screening 2012 Paul L. Crispen, MD Department of Surgery University of Kentucky.

NY Times: Health Section 2011

U.S. Panel Says No to Prostate Screening for Healthy MenBy GARDINER HARRISPublished: October 6, 2011

Healthy men should no longer receive a P.S.A. blood test to screen for prostate cancer because the test does not save lives over all and often leads to more tests and treatments that needlessly cause pain, impotence and incontinence in many, a key government health panel has decided.

Page 14: Prostate Cancer Screening 2012 Paul L. Crispen, MD Department of Surgery University of Kentucky.

• Screening reduced rate of prostate cancer death by 20% (with associated overdiagnosis risk)

• 1410 pts needed to be screened, 48 treated to prevent one death

Schroder et al, NEJM 360: 1320-8, 2009

Page 15: Prostate Cancer Screening 2012 Paul L. Crispen, MD Department of Surgery University of Kentucky.

ERSPC

Page 16: Prostate Cancer Screening 2012 Paul L. Crispen, MD Department of Surgery University of Kentucky.

ERSPC

• 162,243 men randomized• Screening q 2-4 years vs. usual care

– Compliance in screening group 82%– Screening in the control group ??

• 11 years of follow up (median)• Detection was higher in screening group

– 6963 cases vs. 5396, or cumulative incidence of 9.6% vs. 6.0%

Page 17: Prostate Cancer Screening 2012 Paul L. Crispen, MD Department of Surgery University of Kentucky.

ERSPC

• Screening 21% reduction in prostate-cancer death*

• Number needed to screen: 1055• Number needed to treat: 37

* Up to 29% reduction if corrected for noncompliance in the screening arm and contamination of the control arm.

Page 18: Prostate Cancer Screening 2012 Paul L. Crispen, MD Department of Surgery University of Kentucky.

At 11 years, 299 prostate-cancer deaths in screening group and 462 in the control group. Rate ratio 0.79, 95% confidence interval 0.68-0.91, p=0.003.

Page 19: Prostate Cancer Screening 2012 Paul L. Crispen, MD Department of Surgery University of Kentucky.

• Caveats: 1. 52% contamination in control group

-Cancers in control group were stage I and II 2. Limited follow-up 3. Substantial proportion pre-screened (~44%)

Andriole et al, NEJM 360: 1310-9, 2009

Page 20: Prostate Cancer Screening 2012 Paul L. Crispen, MD Department of Surgery University of Kentucky.
Page 21: Prostate Cancer Screening 2012 Paul L. Crispen, MD Department of Surgery University of Kentucky.

PLCO

• 76,693 men in the US randomized, 1993-2001

• Annual screening vs. usual care– Compliance in screening group 86%– Screening in the control group 52%

• 13 years of follow-up (median)• Complications of screening

– PSA and DRE: minimal– Biopsy: 68 per 10,000; infection, bleeding,

retentionAndriole et al. J Natl Cancer Inst 2012;104:125–132

Page 22: Prostate Cancer Screening 2012 Paul L. Crispen, MD Department of Surgery University of Kentucky.

Number of Cases Identified

More cancers identified in the screening group (4250 vs. 3815). Rate ratio 1.12, 95% confidence interval 1.07-1.17.

Page 23: Prostate Cancer Screening 2012 Paul L. Crispen, MD Department of Surgery University of Kentucky.

Number of Prostate Cancer Deaths

At 13 years, 158 prostate-cancer deaths in screening group and 145 in the control group. Rate ratio 1.09, 95% confidence interval 0.87-1.36.

Page 24: Prostate Cancer Screening 2012 Paul L. Crispen, MD Department of Surgery University of Kentucky.

Why do PLCO and ERSPC have different results?

• Contamination in the non-screening arm– 50% in PLCO, and negligible in Europe

• Location of treatment

• Type of treatment

Page 25: Prostate Cancer Screening 2012 Paul L. Crispen, MD Department of Surgery University of Kentucky.

Potential Harm

• Prostate Biopsy:• Majority are negative• Bleeding • Infection

• Prostate Cancer Treatment• Erectile Dysfunction• Urinary Symptoms/Incontinence

Page 26: Prostate Cancer Screening 2012 Paul L. Crispen, MD Department of Surgery University of Kentucky.

Potential Harm

• Potential harms: For every one life saved…– Between 300 and 1000 men have to undergo

screening– Between 10 and 40 men have to undergo

treatment– Indiscriminate treatment of low-risk disease

• Estimates indicate over one million extra men have undergone treatment in the US due to PSA screening to save at most 56,000 lives

Albersten JNCI 2009

Page 27: Prostate Cancer Screening 2012 Paul L. Crispen, MD Department of Surgery University of Kentucky.

U.S. Guidelines

• American Urological Association – 40 years old– > 10 year life expectancy– Informed consent– PSA and DRE

• American Cancer Society: – 50 years old (45 with increased risk)– Informed consent– PSA with or without DRE

Page 28: Prostate Cancer Screening 2012 Paul L. Crispen, MD Department of Surgery University of Kentucky.

• American College of Physicians: – Patient counseling

• NCCN:– Patient counseling beginning at age 40

• American Academy of Family Practitioners:– Recommends against screening

• US Preventive Services Task Force:– Recommends against screening

U.S. Guidelines

Page 29: Prostate Cancer Screening 2012 Paul L. Crispen, MD Department of Surgery University of Kentucky.

International Guidelines

• European Association of Urology– Against national screening

• UK and NZ– Case by case basis following patient

counseling

• Japanese Urological Association– Baseline PSA at 40 years– Annual at 50 years– No upper age limit for screening

Page 30: Prostate Cancer Screening 2012 Paul L. Crispen, MD Department of Surgery University of Kentucky.

How does prostate cancer screening efficacy compare with screening for

other common cancers?

Page 31: Prostate Cancer Screening 2012 Paul L. Crispen, MD Department of Surgery University of Kentucky.

Breast Cancer Screening• CISNET and STS• Number needed to screen:

– STS: 465– CISNET:

• 40-49 years: 746• 50-59 years: 351• 60-69 years: 233• 70-79 years: 377

Tabar et al, Journal of Medical Screening 2004.Hendrick and Helvie , AJR 2012

Page 32: Prostate Cancer Screening 2012 Paul L. Crispen, MD Department of Surgery University of Kentucky.

Colon Cancer Screening

• PCLO– Flexible sigmoidoscopy

• Relative risk reduction 12 years:– Incidence 21%– Cancer specific death 26%

• Number needed to screen: 871

Schoen et al. NEJM 2012

Page 33: Prostate Cancer Screening 2012 Paul L. Crispen, MD Department of Surgery University of Kentucky.

Screening for Prostate Cancer: Comparison with Other Cancers

• Possible risk reduction • Greater number need to screen

• Recent study suggest that appropriately targeted screening may improve these figures substantially for prostate cancer…

Page 34: Prostate Cancer Screening 2012 Paul L. Crispen, MD Department of Surgery University of Kentucky.

PLCOSub-set Analysis of Healthy Men

• Sub-set analysis of men with no comorbidities (that predict cardiovascular or cancer mortality)

• Adjusted hazard ratio for screening group vs. unscreened group was 0.56 (0.33-0.95), p=0.03.

• Number needed to treat to prevent one PCa death at 10 years was 5.

Crawford et al, JCO 2011

No Comorbidities

One or more Comorbidities

Page 35: Prostate Cancer Screening 2012 Paul L. Crispen, MD Department of Surgery University of Kentucky.

Summary of Randomized Trial Data on Screening

• PLCO– No benefit of screening– Flawed due to contamination of the control

arm• ERSPC

– 21% relative risk reduction– 1055 needed to screen; 37 needed to treat

• Screening may be beneficial – In younger, healthier men – As follow up lengthens– Targeted screening reduces NNS to ~300 and

NNT to 10 or 12.

Page 36: Prostate Cancer Screening 2012 Paul L. Crispen, MD Department of Surgery University of Kentucky.

Screening Summary

• There are potential benefits– Potential prostate-cancer specific survival benefit

in appropriate populations– More likely to benefit younger, healthier patients

• There are potential harms– False-positive test leading to other tests– Detection of indolent prostate cancer leading to

unnecessary treatment and treatment related side effects

• Screening decisions must – Balance potential benefits and potential harms– Involve the patient – “shared decision-making”

Page 37: Prostate Cancer Screening 2012 Paul L. Crispen, MD Department of Surgery University of Kentucky.

Questions

• These are my opinions based on available data

• Opinions will continue to change as more data becomes available

Page 38: Prostate Cancer Screening 2012 Paul L. Crispen, MD Department of Surgery University of Kentucky.

Should all men be screened for Prostate Cancer?

• No

Page 39: Prostate Cancer Screening 2012 Paul L. Crispen, MD Department of Surgery University of Kentucky.

Who should be offered screening for prostate cancer?

• Life expectancy greater than 10 years

• Patients who request screening

• Patients who understand risks and benefits

Page 40: Prostate Cancer Screening 2012 Paul L. Crispen, MD Department of Surgery University of Kentucky.

How should men be screened for prostate cancer?

• PSA and DRE

• Starting at age 40-50

• Ending at age 70-75

• Interval of screening– Depends on PSA and risk factors

Page 41: Prostate Cancer Screening 2012 Paul L. Crispen, MD Department of Surgery University of Kentucky.

Thank You

[email protected]