Publication: Differences in overall survival of penile cancer patients versus population-based controls
Program
KU-Authors
KU Authors
Co-Authors
Scheipner, Lukas
Tappero, Stefano
Piccinelli, Mattia Luca
Barletta, Francesco
Garcia, Cristina Cano
Incesu, Reha-Baris
Morra, Simone
Tian, Zhe
Saad, Fred
Shariat, Shahrokh F.
Advisor
Publication Date
2023
Language
en
Type
Journal article
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Abstract
Purpose: To assess whether 5-year overall survival (OS) of squamous cell carcinoma of the penis (SCCP) patients differs from age-matched male population-based controls. Methods: We relied on the Surveillance Epidemiology and End Results database (2004-2018) to identify newly diagnosed (2004-2013) SCCP patients. For each case, we simulated an age-matched control (Monte Carlo simulation), relying on the Social Security Administration (SSA) Life Tables with 5 years of follow-up. We compared OS between SCCP patients and population-based controls in a stage-specific fashion. Smoothed cumulative incidence plots displayed cancer-specific mortality (CSM) versus other-cause mortality (OCM). Results: Of 2282 SCCP patients, the stage distribution was as follows: stage I 976 (43%) versus stage II 826 (36%) versus stage III 302 (13%) versus stage IV 178 (8%). At 5 years, OS of SCCP patients versus age-matched population-based controls was as follows: stage I 63% versus 80% (Delta = 17%), stage II 50% versus 80% (Delta = 30%), stage III 39% versus 84% (Delta = 45%), stage IV 26% versus 87% (Delta = 61%). At 5 years, CSM versus OCM in SCCP patients according to stage was as follows: stage I 12% versus 24%, stage II 22% versus 28%, stage III 47% versus 14%, and stage IV 60% versus 14%. Conclusion: SCCP patients exhibit worse OS across all stages. The difference in OS at 5 years between SCCP and age-matched male population-based controls ranged from 17% to 61%. At 5 years, CSM accounted for 12% to 60% of all deaths, across all stages.
Description
Source:
International Journal of Urology
Publisher:
Wiley
Keywords:
Subject
Urology, Nephrology