Abstract

BackgroundThe PORPUS-P is a short questionnaire for measuring prostate-specific quality of life (QoL), which was designed in Canada for use in prostate cancer (PC) patients. We aimed to generate a German version and compare PORPUS-P scores of German reference men from the general population, and German and Canadian patients with newly diagnosed PC who were scheduled to receive radical prostatectomy (RP) or radiotherapy (RT).MethodsThe study sample consisted of 988 reference men, 121 German and 66 Canadian PC patients scheduled for RT, and 371 German and 68 Canadian PC patients scheduled for RP. All men completed the PORPUS-P (German postal questionnaire, Canada personal interview). Data were gathered from PC patients before the start of therapy.ResultsCanadian patients were better educated than the German patients, and fewer were retired. Patients scheduled to receive RT were older and more were retired. German RT patients had lower D'Amico risk scores and pre-treatment Gleason scores than RP patients, and Canadian RT patients had higher pre-treatment PSA than RP patients. Urinary and sexual dysfunction were seen in PC patients (especially RT patients), but were also common in the German reference men. Crude mean PORPUS-P scores differed statistically significant between German RT and RP and Canadian RP and RT patients, with RT patients having higher QoL scores. The differences in age-adjusted mean PORPUS-P scores between reference men and RP patients were not clinically significant, while RT patients had (clinically) significantly lower scores than the reference men.ConclusionThe German translation of the PORPUS-P appears to be a short and feasible tool for assessing prostate-specific QoL. Although we found a similar response pattern, Canadian and German PC patients scheduled to receive RT or RP rated their pre-treatment quality of life on different levels, which reveals the need for national reference data. Problems in several QoL domains exist before treatment, and differ between PC patients scheduled for RT and RP.

Highlights

  • The Patient Oriented Prostate Utility Scale (PORPUS)-P is a short questionnaire for measuring prostate-specific quality of life (QoL), which was designed in Canada for use in prostate cancer (PC) patients

  • We found a similar response pattern, Canadian and German PC patients scheduled to receive RT or radical prostatectomy (RP) rated their pre-treatment quality of life on different levels, which reveals the need for national reference data

  • Problems in several QoL domains exist before treatment, and differ between PC patients scheduled for RT and RP

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Summary

Introduction

The PORPUS-P is a short questionnaire for measuring prostate-specific quality of life (QoL), which was designed in Canada for use in prostate cancer (PC) patients. We aimed to generate a German version and compare PORPUS-P scores of German reference men from the general population, and German and Canadian patients with newly diagnosed PC who were scheduled to receive radical prostatectomy (RP) or radiotherapy (RT). Prostate cancer (PC) is one of the leading malignancies worldwide, with 543,000 new cases each year [1]. In Germany, tumours of the prostate gland account for about 25% of all malignant diseases (i.e. 58,000 incident cases each year) [2]. Patients aged 75 years or more are often not eligible for radiotherapy (RT) or radical prostatectomy (RP), but are treated with androgen deprivation therapy (ADT). D'Amico low risk patients [5] can choose between RP and RT (either external beam (EB), seed implantation (BRT) without removal of seeds, or a combination of both of EB and BRT) [4]

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