Cancer Medicine (Dec 2022)
Race‐specific prostate cancer outcomes in a cohort of low and favorable‐intermediate risk patients who underwent external beam radiation therapy from 1990 to 2017
Abstract
Abstract Background Previous research exploring the role of race on prostate cancer (PCa) outcomes has demonstrated greater rates of disease progression and poorer overall survival for African American (AA) compared to Caucasian American (CA) men. The current study examines self‐reported race as a predictor of long‐term PCa outcomes in patients with low and favorable‐intermediate risk disease treated with external beam radiation therapy (EBRT). Methods This retrospective cohort study examined patients who were consented to enrollment in the Center for Prostate Disease Research Multicenter National Database between January 01, 1990 and December 31, 2017. Men self‐reporting as AA or CA who underwent EBRT for newly diagnosed National Comprehensive Cancer Network‐defined low or favorable‐intermediate risk PCa were included. Dependent study outcomes included: biochemical recurrence‐free survival, (ii) distant metastasis‐free survival, and (iii) overall survival. Each outcome was modeled as a time‐to‐event endpoint using race‐stratified Kaplan–Meier estimation curves and multivariable Cox proportional hazards analysis. Results Of 840 men included in this study, 268 (32%) were AA and 572 (68%) were CA. The frequency of biochemical recurrence, distant metastasis, and deaths from any cause was 151 (18.7%), 29 (3.5%), and 333 (39.6%), respectively. AA men had a significantly younger median age at time of EBRT and slightly higher biopsy Gleason scores. Multivariable Cox proportional hazards analyses demonstrated no racial differences in any of the study endpoints. Conclusions These findings reveal no racial disparity in PCa outcomes for AA compared to CA men, in a long‐standing, longitudinal cohort of patients with comparable access to cancer care.
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