Prostate Cancer Survival Rates: By Stage, Grade & Age
- What are prostate cancer survival rates?
- Survival by stage β localized, regional, distant
- Survival by Gleason score β Grade Group 1-5
- Survival by age β younger vs. older men
- Survival by risk group β low, intermediate, high, metastatic
- Factors that affect prognosis
- Relative survival vs. overall survival
- Improving survival β modern treatments
- Interactive FAQ β 9 questions about prostate cancer survival
What are prostate cancer survival rates?
Survival rates tell you what percentage of people with the same type and stage of cancer are still alive after a certain period (usually 5 or 10 years). They are estimates based on large groups of patients and cannot predict individual outcomes.
Important caveats:
- Survival rates are based on patients treated 5-10 years ago. Newer treatments may improve survival.
- Most prostate cancers are slow-growing; many men die WITH prostate cancer, not FROM it.
- Your individual prognosis depends on many factors (age, overall health, cancer stage, grade).
Survival by stage β localized, regional, distant
Prostate cancer survival varies significantly by stage at diagnosis:
- Localized (Stage I-II β cancer confined to prostate): 5-year survival: >99% | 10-year survival: >98% | 15-year survival: >95%
- Regional (Stage III β spread to nearby lymph nodes): 5-year survival: >95% | 10-year survival: 85-90%
- Distant (Stage IV β metastatic, spread to bones/organs): 5-year survival: 30-40% | 10-year survival: 10-20%
Trends over time:
- Distant stage survival has improved from 20-25% (1990s) to 30-40% (2020s) due to new therapies (abiraterone, enzalutamide, docetaxel, PARP inhibitors, Lu-177-PSMA).
Survival by Gleason score β Grade Group 1-5
Gleason score (Grade Group) is the most important predictor of outcome:
- Gleason 6 (Grade Group 1 β low risk): 15-year prostate cancer-specific survival: >99%
- Gleason 3+4=7 (Grade Group 2 β favorable intermediate): 15-year prostate cancer-specific survival: 95-98%
- Gleason 4+3=7 (Grade Group 3 β unfavorable intermediate): 15-year prostate cancer-specific survival: 90-95%
- Gleason 8 (Grade Group 4 β high risk): 15-year prostate cancer-specific survival: 80-90%
- Gleason 9-10 (Grade Group 5 β very high risk): 15-year prostate cancer-specific survival: 60-80%
Clinical implication:
- Gleason 6 cancer has near-zero metastatic potential. Men with Gleason 6 rarely die from prostate cancer.
- Gleason 9-10 cancer is aggressive and requires prompt, intensive treatment.
Survival by age β younger vs. older men
Age affects survival in two ways: competing risks and cancer aggressiveness.
Competing risks:
- Older men are more likely to die from other causes (heart disease, stroke, other cancers) than from prostate cancer.
- A 75-year-old with low-risk prostate cancer has a very low chance of dying from prostate cancer (he will die from something else).
Cancer-specific survival by age (localized cancer):
- Under 50: 10-year survival >99% (but cancer may be more aggressive)
- 50-69: 10-year survival >98%
- 70-79: 10-year survival >95% (competing risks increase)
- 80+: Most men die from other causes, not prostate cancer
Survival by risk group β low, intermediate, high, metastatic
| Risk Group | 5-Year Prostate Cancer-Specific Survival | 10-Year Prostate Cancer-Specific Survival | Metastasis Risk (10 years) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Low | >99% | >99% | <1% |
| Favorable Intermediate | >99% | 98% | 2-5%|
| Unfavorable Intermediate | 98% | 95% | 10-15% |
| High | 95% | 85-90% | 20-30% |
| Very High | 90% | 70-80% | 30-50%|
| Metastatic (mHSPC) | 60-80% | 30-50% | N/A |
Factors that affect prognosis
Several factors influence prostate cancer outcomes:
- Stage (TNM): Localized vs. metastatic β most important
- Gleason score / Grade Group: Higher grade = worse prognosis
- PSA level: Higher PSA = worse prognosis (especially >20 ng/mL)
- Age and overall health: Younger, healthier men tolerate treatment better and have longer life expectancy
- Comorbidities: Heart disease, diabetes, COPD reduce life expectancy (competing risks)
- Genetic mutations (BRCA2): More aggressive cancer, but responds to PARP inhibitors
- Response to initial treatment: PSA nadir after surgery/radiation predicts recurrence
Relative survival vs. overall survival
Cancer survival statistics use two different measures:
- Overall survival: Percentage of patients alive after a certain time (includes deaths from any cause).
- Relative survival: Percentage of patients alive compared to the general population (adjusts for deaths from other causes).
Example:
- An 80-year-old with low-risk prostate cancer: 10-year overall survival might be 50% (due to other causes), but relative survival is 100% (no excess deaths from prostate cancer).
Improving survival β modern treatments
Survival for metastatic prostate cancer has improved dramatically with new therapies:
- 1990s (ADT only): mCRPC survival 12-18 months
- 2004 (docetaxel approved): mCRPC survival 18-24 months
- 2010-2015 (abiraterone, enzalutamide, cabazitaxel, radium-223): mCRPC survival 2-3 years
- 2018-2024 (PARP inhibitors, Lu-177-PSMA): mCRPC survival 3-5+ years
Future directions:
- Combination therapies (ADT + novel agents in mHSPC)
- Earlier use of chemotherapy (high-volume mHSPC)
- PSMA-targeted therapies
- Immunotherapy combinations
Interactive FAQ β Prostate cancer survival rates
Overall: 98% (all stages combined). Localized: >99%. Distant (metastatic): 30-40%.
Yes β many men live 5-10+ years with modern treatments (ADT, chemotherapy, PARP inhibitors, Lu-177-PSMA).
15-year prostate cancer-specific survival: 60-80%. Gleason 9-10 is aggressive, but many men are cured with aggressive treatment.
Extremely rare (<1% at 15 years). Gleason 6 is considered very low risk and is managed with active surveillance.
Depends on stage and grade. Low-risk: normal life expectancy (10-15+ years). High-risk: 10-year survival 80-90%.
Yes β especially for metastatic disease. Survival has improved from 1-2 years (1990s) to 5-7+ years (2020s).
Relative survival adjusts for deaths from other causes (more meaningful for prostate cancer). Overall survival includes all deaths.
Median survival is now 5-7+ years. Some men live 10+ years with good response to treatment.
Stage (localized vs. metastatic) and Gleason score (grade) are the most important predictors.
Disclaimer: This information is for educational purposes. Survival rates are estimates and do not predict individual outcomes. Consult a urologist at Vivekananda Hospital for personalised prognosis.