The triumph of Active Surveillance--though some men are being left behind
Worrisome findings on patients with "higher volume" low-risk PCa
By Howard Wolinsky
Sounds like a movie title: The Triumph of Active Surveillance.
But three decades-plus since it was introduced, AS finally has gained a strong foothold as a cancer management protocol for patients with low-risk (Gleason 3+3) to favorable intermediate-risk (Gleason 3+4) prostate cancer, who can avoid or delay aggressive treatments with serious risks for impotence and incontinence.
A major new study describes the success of AS a standard of care. That’s the good news.
But there is bad news about lower use of AS amongst certain racial and ethnic minorities, men who live in rural areas, those with lower incomes and those with higher-volume prostate cancers of two cores or more.
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The number of prostate cancer patients in the U.S. choosing active surveillance over surgery or radiation has increased since 2010, rising from 16% to 60% for low-risk patients and from 8% to 22% for patients with favorable intermediate-risk cancers, according to a study published this week in JAMA Internal Medicine. That’s a 43.5% increase.
“Active surveillance (AS) for prostate cancer (PC), wherein cancer is monitored for progression with intention to deliver curative treatment if the cancer progresses, is increasingly recognized as the standard of care for low- and some favorable intermediate–risk PC,” said lead author Bashir Al Hussein Al Awamlh, MD, a second-year urologic oncology fellow at Vanderbilt University Medical Center.
In response to my questions, Al Hussein Al Awamlh and senior author Jonathan Shoag, MD, associate professor of urology at University Hospitals (UH) Seidman Cancer Center in Cleveland, UH Urology Institute and Case Western Reserve University, said: “This data is a vote of confidence for AS and should encourage men who are appropriate AS candidates to opt for it—they are now in the majority.”
(Bashir Al Hussein Al Awamlh, MD—Vanderbilt University Medical Center. )
The researchers said: “The increase in surveillance reflects the tremendous efforts of some of the greats in our field, that realized that many of the cancers we were treating could be safely observed. We believe this recent increase is due to continued patient advocacy and more urologists being comfortable observing their patients, especially as even more data suggests that it is safe for low-risk cancer.”
Overnight success story?
But the AS Revolution—an “overnight phenomenon” that only took three decades to succeed-- is missing Asian/ Pacific Islander and Hispanic men who were less likely to undergo AS as were lower-income men and men living in rural areas.
Researchers listed major points: 31 percent lower utilization of AS for Hispanic men in comparison to non-Hispanic White men; a 12 percent lower utilization rate for rural patients in comparison to urban patients; and a 30 percent lower utilization rate in patients with median household income lower than $60,000 in comparison to patients with greater than $75,000 in median household income.
“Whether these lower rates, in part, are due to a lack of access to adequate healthcare and educated providers or cultural and personal preferences is uncertain,” the researchers said.
Kevin Ginsburg, MD, co-director of the MUSIC prostate program in Michigan and a urologic oncologist at Wayne State University, said “variation in the use of active surveillance and the influence of social determinant on the use of active surveillance are unacceptable.”
“We would like to see the rising tide of active surveillance lift all boats,” said co-author Daniel Barocas, MD, MPH, executive vice chair of urology at Vanderbilt.
I was surprised to see that White and Black men had similar uptake of AS. “We found no differences in surveillance uptake among non-Hispanic Black men compared to non-Hispanic White men,” the authors told me.
That’s consistent with earlier research as AS uptake for Black men has made major gains in recent years.
(Jonathan Shoag, MD, Case Western Reserve)
Ginsburg noted: “In 2018, 40% of men with a low-risk prostate cancer, a disease that many experts are advocating that we stop calling ‘cancer,’ underwent treatment. The urologic community has coalesced around the use of AS in men with low-risk disease. As far as I'm aware, there is no controversy here. We need to do better..”
The researchers, including from the National Cancer Institute, used the Surveillance, Epidemiology and End Results (SEER) “Prostate with Watchful Waiting database” to identify men over 40 with low- and favorable intermediate-risk prostate adenocarcinoma from 2010-2018, as defined by the National Comprehensive Care Network.
(Other data are consistent with this report if slightly different, The American Urological Association AQUA database showed that just under 60% of low-risk patients chose AS in December 2021. When I was diagnosed in 2010, I was told only 6%-10% of men like with me with low-risk prostate cancer opted for AS.)
Watchful Waiting
The researchers folded in data for patients on Watchful Waiting, an older, less intense version of surveillance. Doctors moved away from WW as a management approach for prostate cancer because too many patients died from malign neglect.
Peter Carroll, MD, one of the godfathers of AS, has told me AS was started because with WW, there was too much waiting and too little watching or surveilling. AS is a more aggressive form of surveillance with regular PSAs, MRIs and biopsies.
The researchers told me that their data showed that AS is the “driving” force behind the trend away from aggressive treatment.
AS is thought to mitigate the adverse effects associated with the treatment of these cancers, while remaining oncologically safe, said Shoag.
“These data show that a diagnosis of prostate cancer no longer means a patient will undergo treatment,” he said. “This further strengthens what are already compelling arguments that the benefits of screening for prostate cancer with PSA far outweigh the harms. We now can, and do, avoid treating cancers that we believe will behave indolently.”
Higher numbers of positive cores=less AS
Another important finding: The number of positive biopsy cores, two and above, was associated with increased odds of undergoing surgery or radiation, “definitive treatment.” Two cores or more were associated with a 50% reduction in the use of AS.
“Although AS series have shown an association between cancer volume on biopsy and clinical outcomes, it is unclear whether the presence of a second positive core should have such an impact on AS use,” researchers said. “This is worrisome, particularly with the increasing use of magnetic resonance imaging in biopsy, which may bias toward more positive cores and potentially higher rates of downgrading at prostatectomy.”
Some urologists are more comfortable than others in using AS in men with two positive cores—biopsy samples—and above. Some—not all— urologists think that “pure” Gleason 6 will never spread or kill. Some think that higher volume Gleason 6 can like more aggressive cancers,
“Our findings suggest that patients and physicians are increasingly becoming more comfortable with observing a subset of cancers with low-risk features, extending the benefits of surveillance to more men. However, there remains room for improvement in active surveillance uptake to reach similar rates as in some countries in Europe or Australia,” Al Hussein Al Awaml said. “Unfortunately, income and race and ethnicity continue to play significant roles in PC treatment delivery.”
Ginsburg said: “I'm very encouraged by this study showing that approximately 60% of men with low-risk prostate cancer and 20% of men with favorable intermediate risk prostate cancer selected active surveillance in 2018. It showsthe excellent progress we have made in reducing the overtreatment of indolent prostate cancer but also highlights that there is still significant room for improvement in several regards.”
H e added: “Looking at the whole of the literature comparing radical treatment to some sort of observational strategy (SPGC-4, PIVOT, ProtecT), men with favorable intermediate-risk disease have outcomes that are much closer to low-risk than they are to unfavorable intermediate-risk or high-risk disease. I believe the next interation of AS will be to understand better the utility of AS for men with favorable intermediate-risk disease, which I suspect is underutilized with only 20% of men in 2018 receiving active surveillance.”
In the MUSIC program, in contrast, more than 40% of favorable intermediate-risk patients go on AS.
Future goals
AUA is shooting for an 80% uptake of AS in low-risk patients. Is that a reasonable goal? Should it go higher like MUSIC program's success with 91% for low-risk patients in the Mitten State?
The researchers said: “Reaching 80% is a realistic goal over the next few years. We don’t know everything about these patients (ie, what their MRI looked like) and there will always be some heterogeneity in management. While surveillance is clearly proffered for low-risk men- some men may still choose other options that may very well be reasonable for them.”
(DreamStudio AI image of the prostate in the style of artist Mark Rothko.)
ASPI premiers next episode of Active Surveillance 101
Active Surveillance Patients International (ASPI) will premiere the latest episode of the Active Surveillance 101 video series: "Second Opinions and Biopsies," featuring our intrepid researchers, PCa patient Larry White and his savvy wife Nancy White, interviewing uropathology legend Jonathan Epstein, MD, of Johns Hopkins.
The event takes place at 12 p.m. Eastern on April 29, 2023. Register here: https://zoom.us/meeting/register/tJYtdeqsrDorGt0ujT6Ifo0Jx0FU30yoAt3L
This program is not to be missed. I'm serious--it’s that good.
After the video, ASPI Board Members will mingle with attendees and respond to questions.
Co-sponsors of the AS 101 series under the Active Surveillance Coalition include AnCan Foundation, Prostate Cancer Support Canada, Prostate Cancer Research Institute, and TheActiveSurveillor.com newsletter.
To view the full AS 101 series to date, covering PSAs, diagnosis, and Active Surveillance, go to https://aspatients.org/a-s-101/https://aspatients.org/a-s-101/
(Dr. Jonathan Epstein, Johns Hopkins.)
Jonathan Epstein, The Patient’s Pathologist
By Howard Wolinsky
Almost thirteen years ago, Dr. Epstein rendered a second opinion in my diagnosis. I know scores of other patients who have seen him for second opinions.
In fact, I estimate since I was diagnosed in 2010, he has reviewed biopsy slides for more than 150,000 patients. I suspect many other physicians turn to him to read their slides.
Typical pathologists consider themselves “doctors’ doctors.” They speak to our urologists.
But Epstein will discuss your case with you. He is the patients’ pathologist
I wrote a book a few years back for the College of American Pathologists on the future of pathology. One of the predictions in the book is that pathologists will have—should have—more direct patient contact.
Epstein is showing the way.
To book a second opinion with Epstein, go to: https://pathology.jhu.edu/patient-care/second-opinions/send
Mason, Thanks. Not "my" meeting. But I'll join in for your company. I have another article coming on "health literacy." You hit the nail on the head. Many patients, especially low-income and lower education, do not understand probablities nor the basics of healthcare. They inevitably are ending up being treated when they would qualify for AS. Howard
Howard, another great article, well written, easy to understand, and educational. It would seem as if the lack of education, "cancer education", plays a huge roll in this particular issue. Hand and hand with 'education' comes greater self advocacy. It would seem as if men who have at least a basic understanding of Prostate Cancer know what questions to ask, and what words to listen for. I have noticed sudden, and sometimes significant, changes in a Doctors behavior and demeanor when patients display and use a few well chosen medical terms. I'll sit in on your meeting tonight ( April 5th ) if I may. I have a joke I can share. mason