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Clinical Trial
. 2001 Feb 1;46(2):87-97.
doi: 10.1002/1097-0045(20010201)46:2<87::aid-pros1012>3.0.co;2-r.

Health-related quality of life in patients with screen-detected versus clinically diagnosed prostate cancer preceding primary treatment

Affiliations
Clinical Trial

Health-related quality of life in patients with screen-detected versus clinically diagnosed prostate cancer preceding primary treatment

J B Madalinska et al. Prostate. .

Abstract

Background: The purpose of this study was to evaluate baseline health-related quality of life (HRQOL) in patients with localized prostate cancer before primary treatment (radical prostatectomy or radiotherapy).

Methods: Two hundred patients with newly diagnosed localized (screen-detected or clinically diagnosed) prostate cancer completed HRQOL questionnaires (generic and disease-specific measures). Clinical data were collected from patients' medical records in four Rotterdam hospitals.

Results: Screen-detected tumors were of more favorable stages and grades than clinically diagnosed ones. The diagnostic groups did not differ significantly in bowel and sexual functioning. Differences were found in urinary functioning, favoring patients with screen-detected tumors of T2-T3 stages. Patients with screen-detected T2 cancer reported better generic HRQOL (physical aspects) than the clinical group, but HRQOL of the latter group was similar to the population norm. Radiotherapy patients were significantly older and had more comorbidity than subjects referred to prostatectomy. Urinary, bowel, and sexual problems were uncommon. Older (> 65 years) radiotherapy patients appeared to be less sexually active. Radiotherapy patients also reported poorer levels of generic HRQOL.

Conclusions: Screen-detected prostate cancer patients presented with more favorable cancer stage and grade. HRQOL was related to both the tumor stage and the detection method. Pre-treatment HRQOL differences between prostatectomy and radiotherapy patients were associated neither with tumor characteristics nor with the detection method. Baseline differences in HRQOL should be taken into account when evaluating post-treatment HRQOL.

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