AI Article Synopsis

  • The study aimed to determine if delays in surgery for prostate cancer patients undergoing robot-assisted radical prostatectomy (RARP) are linked to a higher likelihood of cancer progression (pathological upstaging).
  • A total of 2017 patients with various risk categories for prostate cancer were analyzed, finding that the average time from diagnosis to treatment varied by risk level, with localized high-risk patients experiencing delays.
  • Results indicated that delays in surgery, particularly for localized high-risk cases, could increase the risk of worse pathological outcomes, suggesting timely intervention is important.

Article Abstract

Introduction: We sought to investigate whether surgical delay may be associated with pathological upstaging in patients treated with robot assisted radical prostatectomy (RARP) for localized and locally advanced prostate cancer (PCa).

Materials And Methods: Consecutive firstly-diagnosed PCa patients starting from March 2020 have been enrolled. All the patients were categorized according to EAU risk categories for PCa risk. Uni- and multivariate analysis were fitted to explore clinical and surgical predictors of pathological upstaging to locally advanced disease (pT3/pT4 - pN1 disease).

Results: Overall 2017 patients entered the study. Median age at surgery was 68 (IQR 63-73) years. Overall low risk, intermediate risk, localized high risk and locally advanced disease were recorded in 368 (18.2 %), 1071 (53.1 %), 388 (19.2 %) and 190 (9.4 %), respectively. Median time from to diagnosis to treatment was 51 (IQR 29-70) days. Time to surgery was 56 (IQR 32-75), 52 (IQR 30-70), 45 (IQR 24-60) and 41 (IQR 22-57) days for localized low, intermediate and high risk and locally advanced disease, respectively. Considering 1827 patients with localized PCa, at multivariate analysis ISUP grade group ≥4 on prostate biopsy (HR: 1.30; 95 % CI 1.07-1.86; p = 0.02) and surgical delay only in localized high-risk disease (HR: 1.02; 95 % CI 1.01-1.54; p = 0.02) were confirmed as independent predictors of pathological upstaging to pT3-T4/pN1 disease at final histopathological examination.

Conclusions: In localized high-risk disease surgical delay could be associated with a higher risk of adverse pathologic findings.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ejso.2024.108398DOI Listing

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