Evaluating the Trade-offs Men with Localized Prostate Cancer Make between the Risks and Benefits of Treatments: the COMPARE study

Verity Watson, Neil McCartan, Nicolas Krucien, Victor Abu, Divine Ikenwilo, Mark Emberton, Hashim U. Ahmed* (Corresponding Author)

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

27 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Purpose:
COMPARE (COMparing treatment options for ProstAte cancer) aimed to evaluate and quantify the trade-offs patients make between different aspects of active surveillance and definitive therapy.

Methods:
A Discrete Choice Experiment (DCE) tool was used to elicit patients’ preferences for different treatment characteristics in 34 urology departments. Patients with localised prostate cancer completed the DCE within one week of being diagnosed and before they made treatment decisions. The DCE was pre-tested (N=5) and piloted (n=106) with patients. Patients chose their preferred treatment profile based on six characteristics: treatment type (active surveillance, focal therapy, radical therapy), return to normal activities, erectile function, urinary function, not needing more cancer treatment and 10-15 year cancer-specific survival. Different tools were designed for low-intermediate (n=468) and high-risk (n=166) patients. An error-components conditional logit model was used to estimate preferences and trade-offs between treatment characteristics.

Results:
Low-intermediate risk patients were willing to trade 6.99% absolute decrease in survival to have active surveillance over definitive therapy. They were willing to trade 0.75%, 0.46% and 0.19% absolute decrease in survival for a one-month reduction in time-to-return to normal activities, and 1% absolute improvements in urinary and sexual function, respectively. High-risk patients were willing to trade 3.10%, 1.04% and 0.41% absolute decrease in survival for a one-month reduction in time-to-return to normal activities and 1% absolute improvements in urinary and sexual function, respectively.

Conclusions:
Patients with low-intermediate risk prostate cancer preferred active surveillance to definitive therapy. Patients of all risks were willing to trade-off cancer-specific survival for improved quality-of-life.

Registration:
clinicaltrials.gov Registration Identifier NCT01177865
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)273-280
Number of pages8
JournalJournal of Urology
Volume204
Issue number2
Early online date22 Jan 2020
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Aug 2020

Bibliographical note

Funding:
Medical Research Council (UK) (grant reference: G1002509).

Keywords

  • discrete choice experiment
  • active surveillance
  • prostate cancer
  • focal therapy
  • radical therapy
  • SURVIVAL
  • DISCRETE-CHOICE EXPERIMENTS
  • PATIENT PREFERENCES
  • conservative treatment
  • choice behavior
  • prostatic neoplasms
  • prostatectomy
  • HEALTH-CARE
  • watchful waiting

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'Evaluating the Trade-offs Men with Localized Prostate Cancer Make between the Risks and Benefits of Treatments: the COMPARE study'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this