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Jenny L Donovan a Department of Social Medicine, University of Bristol,
Canynge Hall, Bristol BS8 2PR, b Bristol
Urological Institute, Southmead Hospital, Bristol BS10 5NB, c University Urology Unit, Freeman Hospital, Newcastle upon
Tyne, NE7 7DN
Correspondence to: Mr Hamdy
F.C.Hamdy{at}ncl.ac.uk
Evidence based medicine suggests that evidence of
effectiveness should accumulate, preferably from randomised controlled
trials, before treatments for any condition become widely used. The
case of localised prostate cancer shows how difficult this can be in practice. The suitability of population screening for localised prostate cancer has been debated,
1 2
with particular
concerns about the comparative effectiveness of the main treatments for the disease: radical prostatectomy, radical radiotherapy, and conservative management (also known as watchful waiting or
surveillance).
3 4
Systematic reviews show that published
evidence is limited to two seriously flawed randomised controlled
trials and a range of observational studies with biases relating to
patient selection, variable treatment techniques, outcome assessments,
and methods of data analysis.3 These studies show that 10 year survival is good and overlaps for the three treatments, being
85-90% for radical prostatectomy, 65-90% for radical radiotherapy,
and 70-90% for conservative management.3 Although some
studies indicate a survival advantage of radical treatments in some
patients, this advantage is small and uncertain given the particular
study designs. Furthermore, quality of life may be worse among those
receiving radical treatments because of resulting
complications.5 For example, after radical prostatectomy
up to 3% of patients may be totally incontinent, with up to 60%
"dribbling" urine, and 20-80% impotent, while after radical
radiotherapy up to 36% may have damage to adjacent organs, 10%
incontinence, and 40% impotence.3 Morbidity from
conservative management relates to symptoms (and hormonal treatment if
required) if the disease progresses.
A postal questionnaire survey of practising consultant urologists
registered with the British Association of Urological Surgeons was
conducted exploring their treatment preferences for various clinical
case vignettes. General surgeons, trainees, and those with paediatric
caseloads were excluded. A total of 244 consultant urologists replied
(response rate 60%). Urologists had a mean of 14.1 years' experience
(range 2-30 years), and 130 of them managed 100 patients or more with
prostate cancer. Expertise in performing radical prostatectomy was
restricted to comparatively few urologists
Although reliable evidence supporting radical treatments is
scarce, British urologists seem to favour them for all patients under
70. These findings may be open to misinterpretation, representing what
urologists say they do rather than what they do, although hospital
episode statistics confirm that numbers of radical prostatectomies have
doubled nearly every year between 1990-1 and 1994-5 in the United
Kingdom (hospital episode statistics, 1989-90 to 1994-5).
Clearly, evidence is needed from randomised controlled trials, but such
studies have proved difficult because of perceptions that patients are
reluctant to accept conservative management. New methodological
approaches are required urgently to investigate this issue and to
bridge the gap between clinical practice and the need to acquire
evidence. Such approaches need to retain the essential principle of
randomisation while incorporating more fully patients' perspectives
and preferences. Without this, the increasing availability of radical
treatments, rising rate of detection of localised prostate cancer in
younger men, the concerns of men about harbouring an untreated
malignancy, and the desire of clinicians to cure patients if at all
possible will combine to ensure that the situation cannot resolve
spontaneously. Trials undoubtedly need to be mounted, and until more
evidence accumulates, patients and urologists should use the
information available from recent systematic reviews
3 4
to reach shared decisions about treating localised prostate
cancer
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Subjects, methods, and results
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Subjects, methods, and results
Comment
References
98 reported having
ever performed the procedure and only 12 (14%) that
they performed 20 or more operations per year. The table shows that
radical treatments were the first choice treatment for all hypothetical
patients with apparently localised disease under the age of 70 years
(cases 1, 2, 3, and 5 in table), irrespective of mode of presentation,
prostate specific antigen concentration, and grade of tumour. Radical
prostatectomy was preferred for the man of 55 (case 1), radical
radiotherapy for the man of 69 (case 3). Conservative management was
first choice for the majority of urologists for the man of 75 (case 4).
For the youngest men (cases 1 and 5) only a few urologists selected conservative management, rising to 27% for the man aged
69.
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Subjects, methods, and results
Comment
References
information that highlights uncertainties about the potential
effects of such treatments on survival and quality of life.
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Acknowledgments |
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The list of urological surgeons was kindly provided by the British Association of Urological Surgeons. The views expressed in this paper are those of the authors and not necessarily those of the Standing Group on Health Technology, the HTA Commissioning Board, the HTA Panel members, or the Department of Health.
Contributors: JLD led and coordinated the study, cowrote the systematic review, helped to design the questionnaire, and analysed the questionnaire data. SJF initiated the study. AF supervised the collection and appraisal of the literature, cowrote the systematic review, and helped to design the questionnaire and analyse the data. SS collected and appraised the literature and helped to design the questionnaire. DG provided clinical expertise during the appraisal of the literature and completion of the review. FCH provided essential urological input to the manuscript. The manuscript was written jointly by JLD, FCH, SJF, AF, and DG. JLD, FCH, SJF, and AF are guarantors of the paper.
Funding: The systematic review and questionnaire survey were supported by a grant from the NHS health technology assessment programme.
Conflict of interest: None.
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(Accepted 9 June 1998)
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