TY - JOUR A1 - Wenzel, Mike A1 - Nocera, Luigi A1 - Würnschimmel, Christoph A1 - Collà Ruvolo, Claudia A1 - Tian, Zhe A1 - Saad, Fred A1 - Briganti, Alberto A1 - Tilki, Derya A1 - Graefen, Markus A1 - Becker, Andreas A1 - Roos, Frederik A1 - Chun, Felix A1 - Karakiewicz, Pierre I. T1 - The effect of 10 most common nonurological primary cancers on survival in men with secondary prostate cancer T2 - Frontiers in oncology N2 - Background: This study aims to test the effect of the 10 most common nonurological primary cancers (skin, rectal, colon, lymphoma, leukemia, pancreas, stomach, esophagus, liver, lung) on overall mortality (OM) after secondary prostate cancer (PCa). Material and Methods: Within the Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results (SEER) database, patients with 10 most common primary cancers and concomitant secondary PCa (diagnosed 2004–2016) were identified and were matched in 1:4 fashion (age, year at diagnosis, race/ethnicity, treatment type, TNM stage) with primary PCa controls. OM was compared between secondary and primary PCa patients and was stratified according to primary cancer type, as well as according to time interval between primary cancer vs. secondary PCa diagnoses. Results: We identified 24,848 secondary PCa patients (skin, n = 3,871; rectal, n = 798; colon, n = 3,665; lymphoma, n = 2,583; leukemia, n = 1,102; pancreatic, n = 118; stomach, n = 361; esophagus, n = 219; liver, n = 160; lung, n = 1,328) vs. 531,732 primary PCa patients. Secondary PCa characteristics were less favorable than those of primary PCa patients (PSA and grade), and smaller proportions of secondary PCa patients received active treatment. After 1:4 matching, all secondary PCa exhibited worse OM than primary PCa patients. Finally, subgroup analyses showed that the survival disadvantage of secondary PCa patients decreased with longer time interval since primary cancer diagnosis and subsequent secondary PCa. Conclusion: Patients with secondary PCa are diagnosed with less favorable PSA and grade. Even after matching for PCa characteristics, secondary PCa patients still exhibit worse survival. However, the survival disadvantage is attenuated, when secondary PCa diagnosis is made after longer time interval, since primary cancer diagnosis. KW - mortality KW - primary prostate cancer KW - lung cancer KW - colon cancer KW - secondary cancer Y1 - 2021 UR - http://publikationen.ub.uni-frankfurt.de/frontdoor/index/index/docId/63357 UR - https://nbn-resolving.org/urn:nbn:de:hebis:30:3-633571 SN - 2234-943X VL - 11 IS - art. 754996 SP - 1 EP - 10 PB - Frontiers Media CY - Lausanne ER -