Prostate life expectancy depends on spread

Prostate cancer patients whose tumours have only spread to the lymph nodes have the best survival time prognosis, a study has found.

Where prostate cancer spreads in the body has a direct effect on survival, research has shown.

Scientists have been able to map typical survival times to specific organ sites.

The study found that patients whose tumours had only spread to the lymph nodes had a best prognosis of 32 months.

Those whose cancer had reached the liver had a life expectancy of two years.

Spread to the bones was associated with a survival time of 21 months and to the lungs of 19 months.

The research was based on data from nine large Phase III clinical trials involving 8736 men with advanced prostate cancer. All had undergone standard treatment with the chemotherapy drug docetaxel.

Professor Susan Halabi, from Duke University, in the US, said: "Smaller studies had given doctors and patients indications that the site of metastasis in prostate cancer affects survival, but prevalence rates in organ sites were small, so it was difficult to provide good guidance.

"With the large numbers we analysed in our study, we were able to compare all of these different sites and provide information that could be helpful in conveying prognosis to patients. This information could also be used to help guide treatment approaches using either hormonal therapy or chemotherapy."

Nearly 73 per cent had experienced metastasis, or spread, to the bones. Men with lymph involvement only made up the smallest group, accounting for just 6.4 per cent of the total.

Patients with liver metastasis represented 8.6 per cent, while those with lung disease made up 9.1 per cent.

"These results should help guide clinical decision-making for men with advanced prostate cancer," said Prof Halabi.

The findings are published online in the Journal of Clinical Oncology.


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Published 8 March 2016 8:26am
Updated 8 March 2016 8:30am
Source: AAP


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