Frontiers in Cardiovascular Medicine (Aug 2023)

Cardiovascular mortality by cancer risk stratification in patients with localized prostate cancer: a SEER-based study

  • Zehao Luo,
  • Zehao Luo,
  • Kaiyi Chi,
  • Kaiyi Chi,
  • Hongjun Zhao,
  • Hongjun Zhao,
  • Linglong Liu,
  • Linglong Liu,
  • Wenting Yang,
  • Wenting Yang,
  • Zhijuan Luo,
  • Zhijuan Luo,
  • Yinglan Liang,
  • Yinglan Liang,
  • Liangjia Zeng,
  • Liangjia Zeng,
  • Ruoyun Zhou,
  • Ruoyun Zhou,
  • Manting Feng,
  • Manting Feng,
  • Yemin Li,
  • Yemin Li,
  • Guangyao Hua,
  • Huying Rao,
  • Xiaozhen Lin,
  • Min Yi

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fcvm.2023.1130691
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10

Abstract

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PurposeThe risk of cardiovascular disease (CVD) mortality in patients with localized prostate cancer (PCa) by risk stratification remains unclear. The aim of this study was to determine the risk of CVD death in patients with localized PCa by risk stratification.Patients and methodsPopulation-based study of 340,806 cases in the Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results (SEER) database diagnosed with localized PCa between 2004 and 2016. The proportion of deaths identifies the primary cause of death, the competing risk model identifies the interaction between CVD and PCa, and the standardized mortality rate (SMR) quantifies the risk of CVD death in patients with PCa.ResultsCVD-related death was the leading cause of death in patients with localized PCa, and cumulative CVD-related death also surpassed PCa almost as soon as PCa was diagnosed in the low- and intermediate-risk groups. However, in the high-risk group, CVD surpassed PCa approximately 90 months later. Patients with localized PCa have a higher risk of CVD-related death compared to the general population and the risk increases steadily with survival (SMR = 4.8, 95% CI 4.6–5.1 to SMR = 13.6, 95% CI 12.8–14.5).ConclusionsCVD-related death is a major competing risk in patients with localized PCa, and cumulative CVD mortality increases steadily with survival time and exceeds PCa in all three stratifications (low, intermediate, and high risk). Patients with localized PCa have a higher CVD-related death than the general population. Management of patients with localized PCa requires attention to both the primary cancer and CVD.

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