Cancer Medicine (Apr 2024)

Critical survival periods in prostate cancer in Sweden explored by conditional survival analysis

  • Kari Hemminki,
  • Frantisek Zitricky,
  • Kristina Sundquist,
  • Jan Sundquist,
  • Asta Försti,
  • Akseli Hemminki,
  • Otto Hemminki

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1002/cam4.7126
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 7
pp. n/a – n/a

Abstract

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Abstract Backround We wanted to characterize conditional survival in prostate cancer (PC) in Sweden around and after 2005 when the vast increase in incidence due to the opportunistic testing for prostate specific antigen (PSA) culminated. We hypothesize that analyzing survival data during that time period may help interpret survival trends. We focus on stage‐specific analysis using conditional survival in order to define the periods when deaths most commonly occurred. Methods Data on PC patients were obtained from the Swedish cancer registry for analysis of 1‐, 2.5‐ and 5‐year relative survival and conditional relative survival between years 2004 and 2018. Tumor‐node‐metastatic stage classification at diagnosis was used to specify survival. Results Small improvements were observed in stage‐ and age‐related relative survival duriring the study period. Applying conditional relative survival showed that survival in stage T3 up to 2.5 years was better than survival between years 2.5 and 5. Survival in stage T4 was approximately equal in the first and the subsequent 2.5‐year period. For M1, the first 2.5 year survival period was worse than the subsequent one. The proportion of high risk and M1 disease in old patients (80+ years) remained very high and their survival improved only modestly. Conclusions The data indicate that M1 metastases kill more patients in the first 2.5 years than between years 2.5 and 5 after diagnosis; T4 deaths are equal in the two periods, and in T3 mortality in the first 2.5‐year period is lower than between years 2.5 and 5 after diagnosis. Conditional survival could be applied to explore critical survival periods even past 5 years after diagnoses and to monitor success in novel diagnostic and treatment practices. Improvement of survival in elderly patients may require clinical input.

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