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Prognosis of prostate cancer

Last reviewed dd mmm yyyy. Last edited dd mmm yyyy

Authoring team

Clinical Findings

Treatment

Fifteen year survival

>5% of prostate involved

Total prostatectomy

30-45%

periprostatic extension

irradiation +/- hormonal therapy

20-30%

pelvic lymph nodes involved or distant metastases

hormonal therapy

0-10%

With respect to localized prostate cancer:

  • men with low-grade prostate cancers have a minimal risk of dying from prostate cancer during 20 years of follow-up (Gleason score of 2-4, 6 deaths per 1000 person-years; 95% CI, 2-11)
  • men with high-grade prostate cancers have a high probability of dying from prostate cancer within 10 years of diagnosis (Gleason score of 8-10, 121 deaths per 1000 person-years; 95% CI, 90-156)
  • men with Gleason score of 5 or 6 tumors have an intermediate risk of prostate cancer death
  • the study authors concluded that the annual mortality rate from prostate cancer appears to remain stable after 15 years from diagnosis (1)

The following are associated with high-grade cancer:

  • smaller prostate volume (as determined by TRUS)
  • abnormal DRE findings (if the prostate gland is enlarged, tender, nodular, hard or
  • immobile due to adhesion to surrounding tissue)
  • increasing age
  • black-African and black-Caribbean ethnicity (2)

Summary prognosis data (3):

  • more than 8 in 10 (84%) men diagnosed with prostate cancer in England and Wales survive their disease for ten years or more (2010-11)

  • almost 9 in 10 (85%) men diagnosed with prostate cancer in England and Wales survive their disease for five years or more (2010-11)

  • almost 95% (94%) of men diagnosed with prostate cancer in England and Wales survive their disease for one year or more (2010-11)

  • prostate cancer survival in England is higher for men diagnosed aged 60-69 years old, probably because of PSA testing detecting latent, earlier, slow-growing cancers (2009-2013)

  • almost 95% of men in England diagnosed with prostate cancer aged 50-59 or 60-69 survive their disease for five years or more, compared with two thirds of men diagnosed aged 80 and over (2009-2013)

  • prostate cancer survival is improving and has tripled in the last 40 years in the UK, probably because of PSA testing. In the 1970s, a quarter of men diagnosed with prostate cancer survived their disease beyond ten years, now it's more than 8 in 10

  • when diagnosed at its earliest stage, all men with prostate cancer will survive their disease for five years or more, compared with less than a third of men when diagnosed at the latest stage

 

Reference:


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