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11-09-2009, 11:07 AM
Amid a turf battle locally, patients are left confused
By Henry L. Davis
News Medical Reporter
November 08, 2009, 11:53 PM
A man with early stage prostate cancer faces a confusing choice of treatments. Yet little evidence ranks one treatment better than another at improving his odds of survival.
The problem starts with the PSA test to detect prostate cancer. It can't tell the difference between harmless tumors and those that will grow into dangerous cancers, leading many patients to get unnecessary therapies that drive up costs and risk complications.
Questions about the most diagnosed cancer in men go to the heart of health care reform. A new study indicates that the U.S. health care system wastes as much as $850 billion annually, and 40 percent is attributable to unneeded care.
Buffalo, where the PSA test was developed, is a microcosm of the national debate over some of the most vexing problems.
That includes the downside of competition.
Prostate cancer care here takes place amid a turf battle between two of the biggest providers of care; Roswell Park Cancer Institute and Western New York Urology Associates; an expensive marketing campaign that has raised tensions among doctors; and concern over the potential conflict of interest for urologists who refer patients to radiation equipment they own.
A patient can easily feel lost.
"You need to do your homework and educate yourself if you want to make a wise decision," said Lee Zengierski of North Tonawanda.
He chose radiation and brachytherapy for his cancer after carefully reading articles and surfing the Internet.
The prostate gland is about the size of a walnut and located below the bladder. It produces the liquid that carries sperm. Treatments for early stage cancer include surgery, radiation, and monitoring the tumor in a process called active surveillance.
Active surveillance is considered an option because prostate cancer is generally slow-growing, and experts estimate that 40 percent of patients 65 and older will die of other causes before their cancer requires treatment.
Within radiation, patients also have choices, such as external beam radiation and brachytherapy, in which doctors place radioactive "seeds" inside the cancerous tissue.
In external beam radiation, newer generations of machines are supplanting older versions. Some of the latest technology includes intensity modulated radiation therapy, or IMRT, and image guided radiation therapy, or IGRT.
These two therapies, using sophisticated computer programs and treatment plans, can deliver more radiation to a tumor with less damage to surrounding tissue.
Here's the dilemma for the estimated 192,800 men who will be diagnosed with prostate cancer this year: Each therapy has its advocates, and its pros and cons, but it's unclear which one is best.
The Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, the federal agency in charge of research into health care quality, analyzed hundreds of studies and in 2008 concluded that not enough scientific evidence exists to identify a treatment as most effective at prolonging life or at limiting such common side effects as incontinence.
What is known is that the costs of the therapies differ.
Under Medicare, treatment expenses range from about $10,000 for brachytherapy and radical prostatectomy — not including postsurgical costs — to $30,000 for IMRT outside of a hospital, according to the Institute for Clinical and Economic Review.
Active surveillance costs far less. What's more, there is mounting evidence that many of the therapies are unneeded.
A major American study released last summer found no difference in prostate cancer deaths between men who got a PSA test and those who didn't. A similar study in Europe found that, on average, 1,408 men needed to be screened and 48 needed to be treated to prevent one prostate cancer death.
Patients aren't the only ones wondering what to do.
"It's a conundrum for primary-care doctors. We often don't have the expertise to judge which high-tech referral is best, and patients can get caught between conflicting recommendations," said Dr. Edward A. Stehlik, a Kenmore internist.
In this atmosphere of uncertainty, doctors at Roswell Park and in the community came together in 2001 to try to find common ground on treatment recommendations based on scientific knowledge, not on personal preferences.
But participation dwindled as physicians questioned the value of the guidelines and feared losing control of their patients.
Potential for conflict
In 2008, Western New York Urology Associates opened a new facility for its 19 doctors on Harlem Road in Cheektowaga and expanded into radiation cancer treatment by forming Cancer Care of Western New York. Cancer Care began with two IMRT machines with all the bells and whistles — the devices cost about $2.5 million each — and business is so good that it recently added a third.
The group saw an opportunity to bring urology and radiation treatment under one roof for the convenience of its patients and physicians, said Dr. K. Kent Chevli, a partner in the group.
"We knew IMRT was going to be the future because of its low side-effect profile. But we also wanted an integrated form of prostate cancer care," he said.
Continued...
By Henry L. Davis
News Medical Reporter
November 08, 2009, 11:53 PM
A man with early stage prostate cancer faces a confusing choice of treatments. Yet little evidence ranks one treatment better than another at improving his odds of survival.
The problem starts with the PSA test to detect prostate cancer. It can't tell the difference between harmless tumors and those that will grow into dangerous cancers, leading many patients to get unnecessary therapies that drive up costs and risk complications.
Questions about the most diagnosed cancer in men go to the heart of health care reform. A new study indicates that the U.S. health care system wastes as much as $850 billion annually, and 40 percent is attributable to unneeded care.
Buffalo, where the PSA test was developed, is a microcosm of the national debate over some of the most vexing problems.
That includes the downside of competition.
Prostate cancer care here takes place amid a turf battle between two of the biggest providers of care; Roswell Park Cancer Institute and Western New York Urology Associates; an expensive marketing campaign that has raised tensions among doctors; and concern over the potential conflict of interest for urologists who refer patients to radiation equipment they own.
A patient can easily feel lost.
"You need to do your homework and educate yourself if you want to make a wise decision," said Lee Zengierski of North Tonawanda.
He chose radiation and brachytherapy for his cancer after carefully reading articles and surfing the Internet.
The prostate gland is about the size of a walnut and located below the bladder. It produces the liquid that carries sperm. Treatments for early stage cancer include surgery, radiation, and monitoring the tumor in a process called active surveillance.
Active surveillance is considered an option because prostate cancer is generally slow-growing, and experts estimate that 40 percent of patients 65 and older will die of other causes before their cancer requires treatment.
Within radiation, patients also have choices, such as external beam radiation and brachytherapy, in which doctors place radioactive "seeds" inside the cancerous tissue.
In external beam radiation, newer generations of machines are supplanting older versions. Some of the latest technology includes intensity modulated radiation therapy, or IMRT, and image guided radiation therapy, or IGRT.
These two therapies, using sophisticated computer programs and treatment plans, can deliver more radiation to a tumor with less damage to surrounding tissue.
Here's the dilemma for the estimated 192,800 men who will be diagnosed with prostate cancer this year: Each therapy has its advocates, and its pros and cons, but it's unclear which one is best.
The Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, the federal agency in charge of research into health care quality, analyzed hundreds of studies and in 2008 concluded that not enough scientific evidence exists to identify a treatment as most effective at prolonging life or at limiting such common side effects as incontinence.
What is known is that the costs of the therapies differ.
Under Medicare, treatment expenses range from about $10,000 for brachytherapy and radical prostatectomy — not including postsurgical costs — to $30,000 for IMRT outside of a hospital, according to the Institute for Clinical and Economic Review.
Active surveillance costs far less. What's more, there is mounting evidence that many of the therapies are unneeded.
A major American study released last summer found no difference in prostate cancer deaths between men who got a PSA test and those who didn't. A similar study in Europe found that, on average, 1,408 men needed to be screened and 48 needed to be treated to prevent one prostate cancer death.
Patients aren't the only ones wondering what to do.
"It's a conundrum for primary-care doctors. We often don't have the expertise to judge which high-tech referral is best, and patients can get caught between conflicting recommendations," said Dr. Edward A. Stehlik, a Kenmore internist.
In this atmosphere of uncertainty, doctors at Roswell Park and in the community came together in 2001 to try to find common ground on treatment recommendations based on scientific knowledge, not on personal preferences.
But participation dwindled as physicians questioned the value of the guidelines and feared losing control of their patients.
Potential for conflict
In 2008, Western New York Urology Associates opened a new facility for its 19 doctors on Harlem Road in Cheektowaga and expanded into radiation cancer treatment by forming Cancer Care of Western New York. Cancer Care began with two IMRT machines with all the bells and whistles — the devices cost about $2.5 million each — and business is so good that it recently added a third.
The group saw an opportunity to bring urology and radiation treatment under one roof for the convenience of its patients and physicians, said Dr. K. Kent Chevli, a partner in the group.
"We knew IMRT was going to be the future because of its low side-effect profile. But we also wanted an integrated form of prostate cancer care," he said.
Continued...