Purpose: The increasing proportion of early stage prostate cancer diagnosed by various early detection methods together with reports espousing watchful waiting as a management option raise the possibility that patients may be selected for surveillance according to their initial presentation.
Methods and materials: The outcome for 427 men with clinical stages T1 to T4 localized prostate cancer treated with radiation therapy was evaluated according to their presentation: elevated prostate-specific antigen (PSA) level; abnormal digital rectal examination; or, urologic symptomatology.
Results: With a median follow-up of 30 months, there were no significant differences in disease outcome according to initial presentation. The actuarial incidence of relapse at 5 years was: PSA-detected (54 patients), 24%; digital rectal-detected (173 patients) 29%; and, symptom-detected (200 patients) 31% (p = 0.79). Likewise, there were no significant differences in the incidence of postradiation rising PSA profiles among the three groups. The actuarial incidence of relapse and/or rising PSA at 5 years was: PSA-detected 35%; digital rectal-detected 42%; symptom-detected, 48% (p = 0.72). On the other hand, T-stage, Gleason grade, pretreatment PSA, pretreatment acid phosphatase, and transurethral resection in T3/T4 disease were each highly correlated with outcome. In multivariate proportional hazards regression pretreatment PSA (p = 0.0003), Gleason grade (p = 0.045), and transurethral resection in T3/T4 disease (p = 0.0562) correlated with outcome, but initial presentation did not (p = 0.25).
Conclusion: The absence of a prognostic gradient, good to bad, from PSA-detected through digital rectal-detected to symptom-detected cancer suggests that the initial presentation of patients with localized prostate cancer is not a valid basis for selecting watchful waiting vs. initial treatment.