1 / 31

A/Prof Nathan Lawrentschuk PhD, MB BS, FRACS (Urol) Urological Surgeon & Urologic Oncologist

Prostate Cancer: Active Surveillance. A/Prof Nathan Lawrentschuk PhD, MB BS, FRACS (Urol) Urological Surgeon & Urologic Oncologist University of Melbourne, Department of Surgery Austin Hospital & Ludwig Institute for Cancer Research Austin Hospital, Urology Unit

sahara
Télécharger la présentation

A/Prof Nathan Lawrentschuk PhD, MB BS, FRACS (Urol) Urological Surgeon & Urologic Oncologist

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Prostate Cancer: Active Surveillance A/Prof Nathan Lawrentschuk PhD, MB BS, FRACS (Urol) Urological Surgeon & Urologic Oncologist University of Melbourne, Department of Surgery Austin Hospital & Ludwig Institute for Cancer Research Austin Hospital, Urology Unit Peter MacCallum Cancer Institute, Surgical Oncology Department @lawrentschuk

  2. The Debate Continues.. U.S. Preventative Services Task Force… also said Breast Ca Screening should not occur

  3. Grading of Prostate Ca • Gleason Score X/10 • 2 most predominant grades added together • 6/10= Low Grade (3+3) • 7/10= Intermediate Grade (3+4 or 4+3) • 8-10/10= High Grade(4+5 or 5+4 or or 5+5)

  4. = Cancer

  5. = Cancer

  6. = Cancer

  7. PCa Confusion reigns? A RCT showing BENEFIT of screening Possible overdetection….but mitigated by Active surveillance of low risk tumours Learned Bodies saying Yes, No, Maybe to PSA testing BUT I Have cancer- don’t I NEED Treatment?

  8. No PSA CARAVANS SOON… • Men are not the best at deciding to approach medical care • We need to set up the possibility of SURVEILLANCE prior to biopsy

  9. TRAFFIC-LIGHT THEORY There are 3 possible outcomes of your biopsy Use of age dependent reference values. • 1) Green- BPH, inflammation orlow grade tumour which wewatch like men with bowel polyps • 2) Amber- Intermediate grade think about and often treat • 2) Red- bad cancer that definitely needs treatment

  10. Overtreatment…..

  11. Individualised treatment • Birds: Will grow rapidly and “fly out” of the barnyard i.e. metastasise • Turtles: Grow slowly and rarely leave the yard i.e unlikley to metastasize • Rabbits: In between

  12. 26th April 2011

  13. Low Grade, Low Volume • Low volume, low grade and slow growing tumours (turtles) • Watch them….we did so successfully in men over 75yo so why not younger men? • Many advantages…

  14. Patient Selection = Cancer

  15. Surveillance “Active” • Check PSA (3-6 monthly) • Check DRE (6 monthly) • Re-biopsy (early then 1-2 yearly) • Monitor for anxiety

  16. Benefits of Surveillance • Reduced morbidity and improved QOL • Less anxiety “just like a bowel polyp” • Lower costs so focus on more life threatening cancers

  17. Risks of surveillance • Anxiety if frightened of progression (small number) • Progression and mortality • Updated Toronto data 850 men suggests very unlikely after 15 years

  18. Triggers for Radical Treatment • Progression of Gleason Score on repeat biopsy • Progression of Volume of Prostate cancer (% and/or No. Cores) • PSA rising continually • Change in DRE findings • (Change in MRI findings) • Patient Anxiety

  19. PIVOT STUDYNEJM 2012 Wilt et al • RANDOMISED TRIAL 800 men • Surgery did not reduce mortality more than observation in men with low PSA or low-risk prostate cancer • THIS SUPPORTS SURVEILLANCE for such men • The trial results “suggest a benefit from surgery in men with higher PSA or higher risk disease.”

  20. World Literature –Best Practice • Active surveillance now an accepted strategy to manage men with LOW RISK PCa • BENEFITS of Surveillance: preservation of sexual function and continence • Largest risk of surveillance is progression- triggers to do radical treatment assisted by MRI, Biopsy and PSA

  21. MR in Active Surveillance • 22% reclassified (only 3% negative MR) • 18% no longer fulfilled AS criteria • Able to alter Mx based on re-biopsy targeting In these patients Thompson et al BJUI, In Press

  22. Prostatic Evasive Anterior Tumour Syndrome (“PEATS”)

  23. Transperineal Biopsy • The new kid on the block

  24. World Literature –Best Practice • Appropriate SELECTION criteria and TRIGGERS for radical treatment • Protocols are evolving but AUSTRALIA is at the forefront, particularly here in Melbourne intervention are CRITICAL

  25. Thank You A/Prof Nathan Lawrentschuk PhD, MB BS, FRACS (Urol) Urological Surgeon & Urologic Oncologist University of Melbourne, Department of Surgery Austin Hospital & Ludwig Institute for Cancer Research Austin Hospital , Urology Unit

More Related