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Query: UMLS:C0027627 (
metastases
)
103,950
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
DIC may complicate
prostatic disease
either in its acute type during resection of the prostate causing excessive intra- or postoperative bleeding, or in its chronic type in cases with adenocarcinoma of the prostate with haematogenous
metastases
. Pathogenesis, diagnosis, clinical course, differentiation of the condition against consumption of clotting factors by primary fibrinolysis, and treatment are discussed. The course in four characteristic cases is demonstrated.
...
PMID:Disseminated intravascular coagulation in prostatic disease. 6 93
Prostatic acid phosphatase from human seminal fluid was purified to homogeneity. The enzyme was characterized as to its purity, molecular weight and amino acid composition. Analytical isoelectric focusing of purified enzyme on polyacrylamide gels resolved the enzyme activity into eleven discrete bands, apparently due to various amounts of sialic acid associated with the glycoprotein. Antisera raised against the purified enzyme produced only one precipitan arc on immunoelectrophoresis. A double antibody radioimmune assay was developed and used to evaluate serum prostatic acid phosphatase in 226 patients without
prostatic disease
, in 186 patients with benign prostatic hyperplasia and in 93 patients with prostatic carcinoma. No statistical difference was noted in serum prostatic acid phosphatase between patients with benign prostatic hyperplasia and in those without
prostatic disease
Serum prostatic acid phosphatase was elevated in 94% of the patients with metastatic prostatic carcinoma. Significant elevations were also found in carcinoma patients without
metastases
.
...
PMID:A radioimmune assay for human prostatic acid phosphatase-levels in prostatic disease. 8 87
Prostate growth curves were estimated from serial prostate-specific antigen (PSA) measurements on frozen sera in three groups of men: (a) 16 men with no
prostatic disease
by urological history and examination; (b) 20 men with a histological diagnosis of benign prostatic hyperplasia (BPH) who had undergone simple prostatectomy; and (c) 18 men with a histological diagnosis of prostate cancer. The median number of repeated PSA measurements over an 8- to 26-yr period prior to histological diagnosis or exclusion of
prostate disease
was eight and 11 for noncancer and cancer subjects, respectively. Predicted rates of change in PSA (PSA velocity) were linear and curvilinear for control and BPH subjects, respectively. Subjects with cancer demonstrated both a linear and an exponential phase of PSA velocity. Based on time to double PSA, we estimated the epithelial doubling time for men without
prostate disease
to range from 54 +/- 13 yr at age 40 to 84 +/- 13 yr at age 70. For men with BPH, doubling times ranged from 2 +/- 13 yr at age 40 to 17 +/- 5 yr at age 85. Subjects with local/regional and advanced/
metastatic cancer
had similar PSA doubling times of 2.4 +/- 0.6 yr and 1.8 +/- 0.2 yr, respectively. These data are consistent with what is known about prostatic growth with age in men without
prostate disease
and BPH, and the kinetics of prostate cancer growth. Estimates of prostatic growth rate from changes in PSA may be useful clinically in management of men with
prostate disease
.
...
PMID:Estimation of prostatic growth using serial prostate-specific antigen measurements in men with and without prostate disease. 137 67
Thirteen patients with Stage Tis, Ta, or T1 transitional cell carcinoma (TCC) of the bladder treated by transurethral resections and intravesical chemotherapy developed TCC of the prostate. Among the 13 cases, cytology specimens were obtained from 10 at the time
prostatic disease
was diagnosed; 9 demonstrated TCC. One was treated successfully by transurethral resection of a Ta lesion involving the prostatic urethra only. One of 2 patients declining radical surgery is alive with residual disease at twenty-four months, and the other died of progressive disease at nineteen months. Of the 10 patients who underwent radical cystoprostatectomy, 7 are alive with no evidence of disease eight to forty-two months postoperatively, with 2 of these 7 having received 4 courses of systemic methotrexate, vincristine, Adriamycin, and cisplatinum (MVAC) for
metastatic disease
. Two of the 10 died of
metastatic disease
six and thirteen months postoperatively, and one frail patient died of surgical complications. When treating patients with intravesical chemotherapy for superficial TCC, biopsy of the prostate should be done during follow-up examinations, especially in the presence of cytologic or palpable prostatic abnormalities.
...
PMID:Prostatic occurrence of transitional cell carcinoma after intravesical chemotherapy. 202 89
Serum-acid phosphatase as measured by nine different methods, serum prostate-specific antigen, cancer antigen CA-50, and creatine kinase BB isoenzyme have been evaluated and compared with respect to efficiency in differentiating between prostate cancer and benign hyperplasia. The patient material consisted of 92 prostate cancer patients (59 untreated, and 33 previously treated), 106 patients with benign hyperplasia and 66 patients with non-prostatic urological diseases. The cancer group was classified according to the TNM-system, and also graded according to histopathological findings. The following main conclusions were drawn. Acid phosphatase activity, when measured with continuous monitoring procedure (substrate: alpha-naphthyl phosphate), showed on the average slightly, but statistically not significant higher diagnostic efficiency than when measured with conventional two-point discontinuous monitoring method (substrate: p-nitrophenyl phosphate). There was no or only marginal differences in diagnostic efficiency between activity measurements of the total acid phosphatase and the tartrate-labile fraction, and also between activity measurements and immunological measurements (PAP-RIA and PAP-IEA). Prostate-specific antigen was found to have statistically significant higher diagnostic efficiency than acid phosphatase, the former being positive in 17 of 25 patients with prostate cancer without distant
metastases
, and in six of 11 patients classified as T0-2 M0. Cancer antigen CA-50 and creatine kinase BB isoenzyme appeared to be of little diagnostic value. From a cost-effective point of view, total or tartrate-labile prostatic acid phosphatase activity, as measured by continuous monitoring technique with alpha-naphthyl phosphate as substrate, is suggested suitable as a first-choice parameter both for diagnostic and monitoring purposes with respect to
prostate disease
. Prostate-specific antigen may give additional information, and should be considered analysed on special request.
...
PMID:Diagnostic efficiency of biological markers in blood serum on prostate cancer: a comparison of four different markers and 12 different methods. 242 93
Prostate-specific antigen (PSA) is a sensitive and specific serum marker for monitoring disease activity in men with prostatic carcinoma. Despite reports of elevation of levels of this analyte in men with benign prostatic hyperplasia, no information is available correlating the serum levels with the actual prostatic abnormalities in men having prostatectomy for presumed benign disease. In the present investigation, the authors compared preoperative serum PSA levels with
prostate disease
in 81 men with bladder outlet obstruction. Five pathologic groups were found: incidental high-grade carcinoma (n = 3), low-grade carcinoma (n = 11), acute inflammation (n = 16) with or without chronic inflammation, Prostatic intraepithelial neoplasia (PIN) (n = 25), and benign hyperplasia (n = 26). Serum PSA levels were significantly elevated in both low- and high-grade carcinoma, acute inflammation, and PIN when compared with the patients with benign hyperplasia with and without chronic inflammation. Within the four groups with elevated levels, use of PSA levels could separate only the high-grade cancer patients who were subsequently shown to have
metastatic disease
. Only one patient with simple hyperplasia had PSA levels in the abnormal range.
...
PMID:Serum prostate-specific antigen and prostate pathology in men having simple prostatectomy. 248 63
In 64 patients with prostate carcinoma localized on a gland or pelvic lymph nodes the authors evaluated the possibility of non-surgical assessment of lymphatic
metastases
. The results were compared with conclusions of histological examination of the nodes obtained by pelvic lymphadenectomy. The stage and histological classification of primary
prostate disease
correlates to a certain extent with affection of the nodes. The serum levels of ACP and ACPT are elevated in some of the patients with
metastases
in the pelvic lymph nodes. Both these method enable us to make certain predictions, in particular when the methods are used in combination. However, they cannot replace lymphadenectomy completely. The reliability of bipedal lymphography is 26.4%. Therefore this method, similarly as isotope lymphography, is quite inadequate for evaluation of the condition of the lymphatic system.
...
PMID:[Diagnosis of pelvic lymph node involvement in carcinoma of the prostate]. 272 17
The discriminative ability of several skeletal and tumour markers was assessed in 102 patients with
prostatic disease
. These comprised serum acid and alkaline phosphatase, serum albumin and osteocalcin, urinary excretion of calcium, hydroxyproline and 6-oxo prostaglandin F1 alpha. None of the tests was of value in distinguishing patients with benign
prostatic disease
from those with tumour not involving the skeleton. Values of serum osteocalcin, urinary excretion of calcium and urinary 6-oxo prostaglandin F1 alpha failed to discriminate significantly between patients with or without
metastases
. The remaining four markers were compared by decision matrix analysis and receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curves. Serum alkaline phosphatase provided the most sensitive marker of skeletal
metastases
(80.5%), followed by serum acid phosphatase (80%), hydroxyproline (68%) and albumin (30%). ROC analysis suggested that alkaline phosphatase conformed most closely to the "ideal marker" with highest specificity and sensitivity.
...
PMID:Biochemical markers and skeletal metabolism in carcinoma of the prostate. Use of decision matrix theory and ROC analysis. 300 34
Nuclear Magnetic Resonance (NMR), a recently developed diagnostic method, has proved to be useful in the study of patients with
prostatic disease
. The authors report their experience with this technique in 10 cases of advanced prostate cancer (stage D) treated with LH-RH agonists (HOE 766-Buserelin). NMR provided information on the size of the prostate, the invasion of the vesical floor and seminal vesicles and the involvement of the pelvic and retroperitoneal nodes. It was also useful for ruling out
metastases
in the pelvis and spinal column, and showed an excellent correlation with the bone scan. In 2 untreated cases, NMR was sufficient by itself to diagnose metastatic prostate cancer. However, given the current lack of experience, it is not yet possible to draw conclusions concerning the superiority of this technique over other methods in the diagnosis and staging of prostatic carcinoma.
...
PMID:Nuclear magnetic resonance in advanced prostate cancer (stage D). 378 50
Three commercial radioimmunoassays and one enzymatic assay for prostatic acid phosphatase (PAP) have been tested on 122 patients to determine their relative specificity, sensitivity, and diagnostic value. Each of the three radioimmunoassays was found to have special merits. For distinguishing Stage IV prostatic cancer from normal patients without
prostatic disease
, the Smith Kline (SKF) and New England Nuclear (NEN) assays provide more significant differences. The SKF test also best distinguishes all stages of prostatic cancer from benign prostatic hyperplasia (BPH), but is inferior to the Malinckrodt (MAL) assay for contrasting Stage IV prostatic cancer from BPH. Values obtained with the NEN assay best distinguish the stages of prostatic cancer. Only with the MAL assay are significantly higher PAP values obtained in patients with
metastases
to bone than those without positive bone scans. Viewed from the point of sensitivity, the SKF assay proves best at all levels of specificity examined in detecting all stages (I-IV), and Stage IV prostatic cancer. By none of the assays can estrogenized Stage III and IV cancer patients be distinguished from those not on estrogen.
...
PMID:Comparative performance of three radioimmunoassays for prostatic acid phosphatase. 615 43
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