Patients with localized prostate cancer who were smokers at the time of local therapy had a higher risk of experiencing adverse outcomes and death related to the disease, a systematic review and meta-analysis has shown.
Current smokers in the study had a higher risk of biochemical recurrence, metastasis, and cancer-specific mortality after undergoing primary radical prostatectomy or radiotherapy.
This is the first systematic review and meta-analysis to investigate associations between smoking and outcomes after localized prostate cancer primary therapy, according to investigators led by Beat Foerster, MD, department of urology, Medical University of Vienna.“Our findings encourage radiation oncologists and urologists to counsel patients to stop smoking, using primary prostate cancer treatment as a teachable moment,” wrote Dr. Foerster and coauthors. The report was published in JAMA Oncology.
The investigators performed a database search of studies published from January 2000 to March 2017 and selected 11 articles for quantitative analysis. Those studies, which were all observational and not randomized, comprised 22,549 patients with prostate cancer undergoing radical prostatectomy or radiotherapy. Of those patients, 4,202 (18.6%) were current smokers.
Current smokers had a higher risk of cancer-specific mortality, the investigators found based on analysis of five studies (hazard ratio, 1.89; 95% confidence interval, 1.37-2.69; P less than .001).
They also had a significantly higher risk of biochemical recurrence, based on 10 studies (HR, 1.40; 95% CI, 1.18-1.66; P less than .001), and high risk of metastasis based on 3 studies (HR, 2.51; 95% CI, 1.80-3.51; P less than .001), the report shows.