Characterization of Lymph Node Tumor Burden in Node-Positive Prostate Cancer Patients after Robotic-Assisted Radical Prostatectomy with Extended Pelvic Lymph Node Dissection
Abstract
:Simple Summary
Abstract
1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Data Acquisition
2.2. Pathological Characterization
2.3. Study End Points
2.4. Statistical Analysis
3. Results
3.1. Patient-Level Clinical and Pathological Data
3.2. Lymph Node-Level Pathological Data
3.3. Statistical Analyses for Predictors of BRFS and Incidence of Lymph Node Involvement
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
Abbreviations
References
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Patient-Level Clinical and Pathological Data | |
---|---|
Mean (SD) age at time of surgery | 65.6 years (7.4 years) |
Mean (SD) pre-surgery PSA | 13.2 (12.3) |
Number of patients with detectable 1st post-op PSA | 17 (26%) |
Number of patients with undetectable 1st post-op PSA | 49 (74%) |
Number of patients undetectable 1st post-op PSA that developed BCR | 19 (39%) |
Overall number of patients with detectable post-op PSA or BCR | 36 (55%) |
Number of patients that received any adjuvant/salvage therapy | 38 (58%) |
Number of patients that received adjuvant/salvage ADT | 35 (53%) |
Number of patients that received adjuvant/salvage RT | 33 (50%) |
Number of patients alive without disease at most recent follow-up | 48 (73%) |
Number of patients alive without disease + no adjuvant/salvage therapy | 19 (40%) |
Number of patients alive with disease at most recent follow-up | 14 (21%) |
Number of patients deceased without disease | 3 (5%) |
Number of patients deceased with disease | 1 (2%) |
Median (IQR) post-surgery Grade Group | 5 (3–5) |
Mean (SD) % volume of prostate involved with primary tumor | 37% (23%) |
Pathological Tumor Stage | |
pT2 | 14 (21%) |
pT3a | 19 (29%) |
pT3b | 33 (50%) |
Other Pathologic Features in Prostate | |
EPE | 51 (77%) |
SVI | 32 (48%) |
LVI | 39 (59%) |
PNI | 53 (80%) |
Median (IQR) number of all LNs obtained in ePLND per patient | 30 (23–37) |
Median (IQR) number of +LNs per patient | 2 (1–3) |
Median (IQR) % of +LNs per patient | 5.9% (3.6–9.1%) |
Mean (SD) size of largest tumor deposit in all +LNs per patient | 4.0 mm (4.5 mm) |
Median (IQR) size of largest tumor deposit in all +LNs per patient | 2.6 mm (1.4–4.8 mm) |
Mean (SD) span of all tumor deposits in all +LNs per patient | 12 mm (16.5 mm) |
Median (IQR) span of all tumor deposits in all +LNs per patient | 6 mm (2.5–13.5) |
LN-Level Pathological Data | |
---|---|
Mean (SD) size of largest tumor deposit per +LN | 4.3 mm (5.1 mm) |
Median (IQR) size of largest tumor deposit per +LN | 2.5 mm (1.2–5 mm) |
Mean (SD) total span of all tumor deposits per +LN | 5.5 mm (5.4 mm) |
Median (IQR) total span of all tumor deposits per +LN | 3.5 mm (2–7 mm) |
Mean (SD) % surface area of +LN involved by tumor | 28% (34%) |
Median (IQR) % surface area of +LN involved by tumor | 8% (2–50%) |
Number of +LNs with parenchyma involvement | 144 (99%; n = 146) |
Number of +LNs with capsule involvement | 28 (19%; n = 144) |
Number of +LNs with capsular lymphatics involvement | 27 (20%; n = 137) |
Number of +LNs with ENE | 46 (32%; n = 144) |
Mean (SD) span of ENE | 2.1 mm (2.3 mm) |
Median (IQR) span of ENE | 1.2 mm (0.8–3 mm) |
Mean (SD) distance of ENE from LN capsule | 0.7 mm (0.9 mm) |
Median (IQR) distance of ENE from LN capsule | 0.4 mm (0.2–0.7 mm) |
Risk Factors for Increased Incidence of LN Metastases: | IRR | 95% CI |
---|---|---|
Pre-surgery PSA, log2 | 1.31 | 1.15–1.50 |
Clinical stage T3-T4 vs. T1-2 | 1.92 | 1.27–2.90 |
Extraprostatic extension (EPE) | 2.04 | 1.30–3.19 |
Seminal vesical involvement (SVI) | 1.91 | 1.40–2.62 |
Lymphovascular invasion (LVI) | 1.51 | 1.09–2.09 |
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Gottlieb, J.; Chang, S.-C.; Choe, J.; Grunkemeier, G.L.; Hanes, D.A.; Krasne, D.; Hoon, D.S.B.; Wilson, T.G. Characterization of Lymph Node Tumor Burden in Node-Positive Prostate Cancer Patients after Robotic-Assisted Radical Prostatectomy with Extended Pelvic Lymph Node Dissection. Cancers 2023, 15, 3707. https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers15143707
Gottlieb J, Chang S-C, Choe J, Grunkemeier GL, Hanes DA, Krasne D, Hoon DSB, Wilson TG. Characterization of Lymph Node Tumor Burden in Node-Positive Prostate Cancer Patients after Robotic-Assisted Radical Prostatectomy with Extended Pelvic Lymph Node Dissection. Cancers. 2023; 15(14):3707. https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers15143707
Chicago/Turabian StyleGottlieb, Josh, Shu-Ching Chang, Jane Choe, Gary L. Grunkemeier, Douglas A. Hanes, David Krasne, Dave S. B. Hoon, and Timothy G. Wilson. 2023. "Characterization of Lymph Node Tumor Burden in Node-Positive Prostate Cancer Patients after Robotic-Assisted Radical Prostatectomy with Extended Pelvic Lymph Node Dissection" Cancers 15, no. 14: 3707. https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers15143707
APA StyleGottlieb, J., Chang, S. -C., Choe, J., Grunkemeier, G. L., Hanes, D. A., Krasne, D., Hoon, D. S. B., & Wilson, T. G. (2023). Characterization of Lymph Node Tumor Burden in Node-Positive Prostate Cancer Patients after Robotic-Assisted Radical Prostatectomy with Extended Pelvic Lymph Node Dissection. Cancers, 15(14), 3707. https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers15143707