Cancers (Mar 2023)

Comparison of Four Validated Nomograms (Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center, Briganti 2012, 2017, and 2019) Predicting Lymph Node Invasion in Patients with High-Risk Prostate Cancer Candidates for Radical Prostatectomy and Extended Pelvic Lymph Node Dissection: Clinical Experience and Review of the Literature

  • Giovanni Battista Di Pierro,
  • Stefano Salciccia,
  • Marco Frisenda,
  • Antonio Tufano,
  • Alessandro Sciarra,
  • Emiliano Scarrone,
  • Francesco Del Giudice,
  • Vincenzo Asero,
  • Giulio Bevilacqua,
  • Martina Moriconi,
  • Antonio Carbone,
  • Antonio Pastore,
  • Stefano Signore,
  • Pierluigi Bove,
  • Flavio Forte,
  • Paolo Emiliozzi,
  • Andrea Tubaro,
  • Cosimo De Nunzio,
  • Vittorio Canale

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers15061683
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 6
p. 1683

Abstract

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Background: The indication for extended pelvic lymph node dissection (ePLND) at the time of radical prostatectomy (RP) is based on nomograms predicting the risk of lymph node invasion (LNI). However, limited data are available on the comparison of these predictive models in high-risk prostate cancer (PC) patients. Therefore, we compared the accuracy of the most used nomograms (MSKCC, Briganti 2012, 2017, and 2019) in the setting of high-risk PC patients submitted to ePLND. Methods: 150 patients with high-risk PC disease treated from 2019 to 2022 were included. Before RP + ePLND, we assessed the MSKCC, Briganti 2012, 2017, and 2019 nomograms for each patient, and we compared the prediction of LNI with the final histopathological analysis of the ePLND using pathologic results as a reference. Results: LNI was found in 39 patients (26%), and 71.3% were cT2. The percentage of patients with estimated LNI risk above the cut-off was significantly higher in pN+ cases than in pN0 for all Briganti nomograms. The percentage of patients at risk of LNI, according to Briganti Nomogram (2012, 2017, and 2019), was significantly higher in pN+ cases than in pN0 (p p = 0.2). All nomograms showed high sensitivity (Se > 0.90), low specificity (Sp 7% showed pN0 compared to 71% with Briganti 2012 > 5%, 69% with Briganti 2017 > 7%, and 70% with Briganti 2019 > 7%. Conclusions: Despite the high-risk disease, in our patients treated with ePLND emerges a still high number of pN0 cases and a similar low specificity of nomograms in predicting LNI.

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