The Indian Express (Delhi Edition)

‘Treat older prostate cancer patients on fitness, not age’

- MADELINE KENNEDY

ALTHOUGH MANY prostate cancer patients are elderly, new guidelines from the Internatio­nal Society of Geriatric Oncology say that men’s treatment should be based on their health status and not on their age.

Elderly patients who are frail or who have multiple health conditions may not be able to handle aggressive cancer treatment, but aggressive treatment may be the best course for healthier older patients, the guideline authors write January 11 in European Urology.

“If the health status of the patient is okay, the treatment of elderly patients is basically the same as their younger counterpar­ts,” said lead author Dr Jean-pierre Droz of Claudebern­ard Lyon 1 University in France.

To update the Society’s 2014 guidelines for treating elderly prostate cancer patients, the task force reviewed articles published between 2013 and 2016 on treatment of prostate cancer patients over age 70 and each member proposed guideline changes. The results represent their consensus.

The first recommenda­tion is that doctors should decide the treatment of an older patient based on the man’s individual health status and not according to his age. Elderly patients should be treated like younger patients if they meet certain standards of health, including considerat­ions of physical fitness, nutrition and other health conditions, they write.

The authors recommend assessing each patient with what’s known as the G8 screening tool, which covers food intake, weight loss, body mass, mobility, neurologic­al issues, medication­s, health status and age. If the G8 produces an abnormal result, further evaluation­s should take into account whether patients have other health conditions, can perform basic daily activities and if they have had any recent unintentio­nal weight loss.

Healthy patients should be able to tolerate any standard treatment, while patients considered frail must receive treatment to try to reverse their impairment­s before they can receive standard cancer therapies, according to the authors. Patients with untreatabl­e health problems should receive treatment for their symptoms and may be able to handle adapted cancer treatments. Doctors should also screen patients for mental impairment­s during the first evaluation to determine if they are able to make their own treatment decisions. REUTERS

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