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Query: UMLS:C0376358 (prostate cancer)
59,338 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Transrectal microwave hyperthermia was applied to 46 stages D1 and D2 prostate cancer patients to treat urinary symptoms and local pain unrelieved by total androgen ablation therapy. Hyperthermia was administered in 10, 60-minute sessions twice a week for 5 weeks. A calculated intraprostatic temperature of 43.5 +/- 0.5C was maintained throughout the treatment. At 2 years the mean residual urine volume was significantly decreased (p less than 0.05), while the mean peak flow rate and maximum flow nomogram were improved but not significantly. The majority of patients reported a notable amelioration of subjective symptoms and quality of life. The only complication was a prostatorectal fistula that was cured by leaving a urethral catheter in place for 4 weeks. Prostatic hyperthermia is a safe and effective palliative procedure for bladder outlet obstruction due to advanced prostate cancer.
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PMID:Transrectal microwave hyperthermia for advanced prostate cancer: long-term clinical results. 137 8

Hematological and biochemical parameters were evaluated in 31 patients receiving 150 MBq 89Strontium (89Sr) intravenously due to painful skeletal metastases from hormone resistant prostate cancer. Two and 3 months after the injection prostate specific antigen (PSA) had increased by a median of 36% and 100%, respectively, as compared to the pretreatment value whereas alkaline phosphatase (APHOS) had decreased by about 20% (median). The leucocyte and platelet counts were reduced by about 20-35%, without reaching grade greater than or equal to 2 toxicity. Pain relief was reported in 14 of 29 evaluable patients at 2 months and in 11 of 23 patients at 3 months. It is concluded that 89Sr represents a worthwhile therapeutic modality in the palliation treatment of patients with hormone resistant prostate cancer, though the biological significance of frequently increasing PSA and decreasing APHOS is not yet completely understood.
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PMID:89Strontium in bone metastases from hormone resistant prostate cancer: palliation effect and biochemical changes. 137 58

Although osteosclerotic metastases are characteristic of prostatic carcinoma, bone resorption is also accelerated. Since clodronate inhibits bone resorption and relieves bone pain, we have given it to patients with painful bone disease from prostatic cancer after failure of hormonal therapy. All patients received estramustine phosphate orally. Simultaneously they were randomly allocated to clodronate (36) and placebo (39) groups. Clodronate was given by mouth. The dose was 3.2 g for the first month, thereafter 1.6 g. Pain relief was more distinct in the clodronate group where one third of patients were totally free of bone pain. The use of analgesics stopped in 38% of patients on clodronate and in 18% on placebo which effect probably belongs to estramustine phosphate. Serum calcium concentration decreased more markedly in the clodronate group. Clodronate dose of 3.2 g seemed to be more potent than that of 1.6 g. Side effects were uncommon and occurred equally in both groups. No significant differences were seen in median survival or survival rates between the groups.
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PMID:Effect of oral clodronate on bone pain. A controlled study in patients with metastic prostatic cancer. 138 86

The authors retrospectively reviewed 50 episodes of spinal epidural tumor that occurred in 42 patients with metastatic prostate cancer and were treated with external-beam radiation. Treatment response was evaluated in terms of symptoms, neurologic status, and, in most cases, reduction of tumor on repeat myelography. At the completion of therapy, 92% of treated patients experienced pain relief and 67% had significant to complete improvement on neurologic examination. Thirty days after treatment, repeat myelography was performed in 40 of the 50 cases; compared with the initial findings immediately preceding radiation therapy (RT), the results of 58% of these studies had normalized completely, results were improved in 25%, and the results had not changed in 18%. The presence of a high-grade compression fracture of the vertebral body was an indicator of poor prognosis for tumor response on repeat myelography. The ability of a patient to walk before treatment and tumor response on repeat myelography were associated significantly with improved outcome of RT and with survival. The authors conclude that RT can effectively palliate epidural lesions from metastatic prostate cancer. The prognosis for the long-term response to therapy may be indicated by pretreatment ambulatory status and posttreatment imaging of the epidural space.
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PMID:Spinal epidural tumor in patients with prostate cancer. Clinical and radiographic predictors of response to radiation therapy. 139 60

As part of an ongoing Phase I/II study at Duke University Medical Center investigating the toxicity and efficacy of external beam radiotherapy plus hyperthermia for deep-seated, locally advanced or recurrent solid tumors, 12 patients with prostate malignancies (adenocarcinoma--11, leiomyosarcoma--1) were treated with radiotherapy plus hyperthermia. Hyperthermia was given after radiotherapy using a Radio Frequency Phase/Amplitude Control Sigma 60 annular phased array device. All patients had simultaneous temperature measurements made in the rectal lumen and within the prostate during at least one hyperthermia session. Intraprostate thermometers were placed via a unique method described herein using both computerized tomography scan and a rigid sigmoidoscope for guidance. We were able to achieve the desired tumor temperature of > or = 42.5 degrees C in only 1/28 (3.5%) of hyperthermia treatments. Subjective symptoms of pain and/or pressure limited power deposition in 79% of hyperthermia treatments. Higher temperatures were achieved in the distal rectum than in the prostate in all treatments, although the differences were not statistically significant. This temperature differential could not be compensated by using phase and amplitude steering. Rectal temperatures adjacent to the prostate were predictive of prostate temperatures. We conclude that using this regional heating technique we were unable to demonstrate an ability to get an advantageous temperature differential between the prostate and normal tissue. This technique is not useful as an adjuvant to radiation therapy for prostate cancer. The usefulness of other regional heating techniques and devices should be explored.
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PMID:Phase I/II study of external radio frequency phased array hyperthermia and external beam radiotherapy in the treatment of prostate cancer: technique and results of intraprostatic temperature measurements. 139 35

When present at diagnosis or when developing in the course of disease, the presence of bone metastases from prostate cancer is generally considered an indication to begin endocrine therapy, as this is clearly the most effective form of treatment for this problem. Endocrine therapy can stop progression of prostate cancer in 80-85% of cases. Endocrine therapy can relieve pain, prevent pathologic fractures, and prevent neurologic complications from bone metastases from prostate cancer. Rarely, bone scans may become normal after the start of endocrine therapy, but partial improvement or stabilization of bone scans are more commonly seen. While endocrine therapy has been the first line of treatment of metastatic prostate cancer for the past 50 years, the recent development of newer forms of endocrine therapy have increased the options in the past few years. In addition to orchiectomy and estrogens, newer alternatives include inhibitors of androgen synthesis, the class of agents termed "antiandrogens", and luteinizing hormone releasing-hormone (LHRH) analogues either alone or in combination. Orchiectomy causes a prompt fall in serum testosterone and is regarded by many as the "standard" form of endocrine therapy, but there is concern about the psychologic impact of surgery. Estrogens are being used less frequently today because of their real or potential side-effects, including cardiovascular and thromboembolic complications. The development of analogues of LHRH has resulted in another major choice for endocrine therapy, and one which is therapeutically equivalent to orchiectomy or estrogens. Since LHRH analogues may cause an early rise or "flare" in serum testosterone before it drops to castrate level, these agents should not be given alone to patients with severe pain or neurologic problems. The newly available antiandrogen flutamide can block the "flare", and may also improve survival when used with LHRH analogues or orchiectomy, especially when disease is less advanced. Not all studies of "combination therapy" support this conclusion. However, the use of flutamide is increasing significantly in the United States. Both the LHRH analogues and flutamide are fairly safe, but they are very expensive. Their use, in combination, is likely to become a progressively more common form of initial endocrine therapy in the future. The growing application of prostate specific antigen (PSA) as a tumor marker for prostate cancer has made the difficulty in interpreting changes in bone scans a much less critical problem in determining response to endocrine or other forms of therapy for advanced prostate cancer.
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PMID:Hormone therapy of prostatic bone metastases. 149 25

Until now, patients with a progressive prostatic cancer, in whom all therapies failed and the disease spread locally and distally, was considered "a lost patient"; because it did not exist an effective therapy easily to be used. The skeletal pain control is a serious problem and it is a great responsibility also for the Urologists especially if the patient has not a short survival time and the quality of life very poor. Physicians feel the need for a systemic, well tolerated and effective therapy also for a long time, uniform and repeatable, able to be efficient for these patients. Strontium 89 chloride seems to offer all those possibilities and to be the best procedure for Urologist, Radiotherapists and Nuclear Specialists in order to satisfy the patients requirements. International research has shown Sr-89 Chloride is a powerful new therapy. Sr-90 Chloride is a radiopharmaceutical product for the treatment of painful metastases from prostatic cancer. It is a new treatment but its effectiveness is well documented and results are reported in the most important international literature. In our Department a clinical research has started and our purpose is to produce more data for a clinical and biological evaluation of the results hoping that a similar research will extend as a multicenter study.
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PMID:[Treatment of symptomatic bone metastases of prostatic carcinoma with strontium (Sr-89) chloride: initial experience]. 157 May 27

Phosphorus-32, employed as the orthophosphate or polyphosphate, can reduce or relieve the pain of osteoblastic metastases without serious hematologic toxicity, especially if used as a single injection. Uptake of this beta-emitter by osteoblastic-reactive bone and possibly by tumor and other cells can lead to pain reduction and often to cell killing. Efficacy has been demonstrated for the treatment of pain in 84% of 322 breast cancer patients and 77% of 444 prostate cancer patients found in a review of the literature. These results match those of the newer radiopharmaceuticals currently under investigation.
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PMID:Phosphorus-32 radiopharmaceuticals for the treatment of painful osseous metastases. 158 2

Bone metastases occur in up to 85% of patients (at autopsy) who have breast, lung, and prostate cancer, and are a common cause of pain and neurological morbidity in patients with these and other cancers. The management of pain, the most common complication of bone metastasis, requires a knowledge of specific clinical syndromes and the associated neurological and orthopedic morbidities, as well as an understanding of current antitumor and pharmacological therapies. Knowledge of these potential complications are important in the design of clinical trials that seek to evaluate the effectiveness of new treatments for bone metastasis. Although radiation therapy in combination with analgesic drug therapies remains the mainstay of treatment, much recent interest in drugs with specific effects on bone elements, especially the osteoclast, offer the promise of providing effective pain relief with fewer side effects than is currently possible with conventional therapies.
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PMID:The management of intractable bone pain: a clinician's perspective. 158 4

Metastatic cancer to the penis is rare, its optimum treatment remains poorly defined and the outcome of patients with such metastases is poor. Hyperthermia in conjunction with radiation therapy has been shown to be an effective modality in the treatment of locally advanced or recurrent cancer and hyperthermia alone is under evaluation in treating benign disorders, such as hypertrophy of the prostate. Recently, 4 patients with symptomatic metastatic lesions to the penis (3 had primary prostatic cancer and 1 had rectal cancer) were treated with radiation therapy and hyperthermia. Treatment was well tolerated except for pain during hyperthermia, which limited the temperatures that could be obtained. All of the patients improved symptomatically, 1 achieved a complete response and 2 had partial responses. No significant complications were noted. Symptomatic control was maintained in all patients for the duration of their survival. This limited series suggests the possible role of local hyperthermia as an adjunct to radiation therapy in the treatment of metastases to the penis.
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PMID:Cancer metastatic to the penis: treatment with hyperthermia and radiation therapy and review of the literature. 161 85


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