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

Since 1965, 401 patients with prostate cancer have received intensive local pelvic radiation therapy at the Virginia Mason Medical Center. Two hundred seventy-seven of these patients were treated from 1965 through 1975, comprising the study group. Two hundred twenty-one of this series were in the Stage C category. The 36 Stage B cancers were either medically nonoperable, or advanced extent, or had high-grade histopathology. Ten patients each were in diffuse Stage A or Stage D groups, the latter receiving local palliative intensive treatment to the prostate area. The mean age of the patients was 67.6 years. The five year survival of the Stage C group was 57.7%. There was no apparent influence on the survival of irradiated Stage C patients who received estrogen therapy. Current treatment techniques employ 10 megavolt photon beam with whole pelvic nodal fields and bilateral arc rotational boost fields. The incidence of reactions and complications is presented.
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PMID:Radiation therapy for localized prostate cancer. 8 78

Prospective pathologic staging by pelvic lymphadenectomy in 60 patients with clinically localized carcinoma of the prostate disclosed a high incidence (35 per cent) of clinically silent and unsuspected lymph node metastases. When present, metastatic disease was frequently bilateral (57 per cent) and most commonly involved the obturator-hypogastric lymph nodes (87 per cent). Micrometastases alone were found in 5 patients and the potential significance of this finding on survival is discussed. Although the presence or absence of metastases could not be accurately predicted by histologic analysis of biopsy or prostatectomy specimens, the finding of undifferentiated tumor, marked anaplasia and penetration through the capsule correlated positively with nodal metastases. Pelvic lymphadenectomy is a safe and important diagnostic tool in the accurate staging of these patients. Its widespread use is advocated in patients with clinical stage B1, B2 and C tumors prior to definitive therapy. Based on the prospective data generated in this study lymphatic metastasis appears to be an early event in the spread of prostatic cancer.
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PMID:Prostatic carcinoma: incidence and location of unsuspected lymphatic metastases. 124 19

Laparoscopic pelvic lymph node dissection has proven to be a reliable, less-invasive method for staging prostate cancer. Presently, no clear indications for its performance prior to radical retropubic prostatectomy are available. With the purpose of identifying clinical parameters by which to better select patients who would benefit from laparoscopic pelvic lymph node dissection, we chose to perform the procedure only in patients considered at high risk for nodal metastasis: clinical stages B2 or C, poorly differentiated tumors, and/or a serum prostatic-specific antigen level of more than 20 ng/dL. We compared the results with those of patients not meeting such parameters. Of 80 men receiving treatment for clinically localized disease, 30 (38%) fulfilled one or more of the criteria. When considering the individual clinical parameters, clinical stage was predictive of nodal involvement in five (26%) of 19 patients, grade was predictive in three (37.5%) of eight patients, and prostatic-specific antigen level was predictive in six (40%) of 15 patients. Statistical analysis confirmed that the prostatic-specific antigen level was the single best predictor of nodal involvement. However, better predictive values were obtained when the different criteria were combined. Nodal involvement was predicted most consistently by a combination of clinical stage and prostatic-specific antigen level.
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PMID:Staging laparoscopic pelvic lymph node dissection. Experience and indications. 128 80

The incidence of prostate cancer in the UK is increasing, and the disease is being detected more often in younger patients (e.g. from routine PSA measurement during health-care screening). Left untreated, a significant proportion of patients will undergo progression of their disease locally and/or develop metastases. Modern imaging techniques have greatly aided the assessment of early prostatic cancer, enabling both accurate assessment of the primary tumour and giving valuable information regarding lymph node metastases. PSA measurements are also extremely helpful, and this has replaced acid phosphatase as a marker for prostatic malignancy. Controversy still remains, however, over the best form of management. Radical prostatectomy undoubtedly produces the best results in the literature, but the patients are highly selected (e.g. those with nodal metastases are excluded) and some patients with well differentiated tumours may have been over-treated, as they may have been expected to do well with surveillance alone. Full clinical trials are required in identically staged patients to assess the relative merits of surveillance, radiotherapy and surgery, and this should now be possible with recent advances in imaging techniques.
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PMID:Current trends in the management of localised prostate cancer. 130 88

To determine the efficacy of recombinant human leukocyte alpha-interferon (IFL-RA) in advanced hormone-refractory prostate cancer, the authors treated 40 patients with IFL-RA administered intramuscularly at a dose of 10 x 10(6) U/m2 three times weekly. Toxicity was substantial and necessitated at least a 50% dose reduction in all but five patients during the first 1-2 months of therapy. No responses were observed in patients with bone metastases, but complete and partial regression of nodal disease were observed in two patients with extraosseous disease (overall response rate, 5%; 95% confidence interval, 0.64-17.75%). The authors conclude that IFL-RA cannot be recommended at this dose and schedule in patients with advanced prostate cancer, but additional study of its use in patients with nodal disease may be warranted.
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PMID:A phase II study of recombinant human alpha-interferon in advanced hormone-refractory prostate cancer. 138 29

A number of studies have identified race as a prognostic factor for survival from prostate cancer. To evaluate the prognostic significance of race in a controlled setting, we evaluated 1294 patients treated on three prospective randomized trials conducted by the Radiation Therapy Oncology Group between 1976 to 1985. One-hundred and twenty (9%) of the patients were coded as black, while 1077 (83%) of the patients were coded as white. Protocol 7506 included 607 patients with clinical Stage T3-T4Nx or T1b-T2N1-2. Protocol 7706 included 484 patients with clinical Stage T1b or T2 who were node negative. Protocol 8307 included 203 Stage T2b-T4 patients with no lymph node involvement beyond the pelvis. Univariate and multivariate analyses were used to assess the possible independent significance of race and other prognostic factors, including Gleason score, serum acid phosphatase, nodal status, and hormonal status. Protocols 7706 and 8307 revealed that race was not of prognostic significance for disease-free or overall survival by either univariate or multivariate analysis. Univariate analysis of Protocol 7506 revealed that the median survival for blacks was somewhat shorter (5.4 years vs. 7.1 years, p = 0.02). This difference persisted after a multivariate analysis. A higher percentage of blacks treated on 7506 had an abnormally elevated serum acid phosphatase compared to whites (p = 0.006), and the time to distant failure tended to be shorter (p = 0.07). These findings suggest that blacks treated on 7506 may have had more extensive disease at presentation. Based on these prospective randomized trials, it is most likely that the lower survival noted for black Americans with prostate cancer reflects the tendency for blacks to present with more advanced disease. Differences in access to care, the quality of care received, and the impact of co-morbid conditions may explain the lower survival reported for black Americans elsewhere in the literature.
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PMID:The prognostic significance of race and survival from prostate cancer based on patients irradiated on Radiation Therapy Oncology Group protocols (1976-1985). 139 29

After a brief summary about surgical technique of radical prostatectomy and its indications in the different stages of prostatic cancer, the Authors describe complications and surgical sequelae of this operation. The Authors report a brief series. It is composed with 13 patients. Their have been submitted to radical prostatectomy for prostatic cancer between January 1989 and September 1991. Pathological stage was B1 in 6 patients, B2 in 2 patients, C1 in 4 cases and C2 in 1. Particularly the role of ultrasonography in detection and follow-up of early complications such as lymphocele, pelvic hematoma and anastomotic urine leakage is stressed. Transrectal ultrasound is especially useful in the detection of urine leakage from vesico-urethral anastomosis. This technique is compared with traditional cystourethrography and advantages and disadvantages of the two techniques are discussed. Later complications of radical prostatectomy are anastomotic stenosis, pelvic recurrences, nodal or parenchymal metastasis, urinary incontinence. The role of transrectal ultrasound in the detection of anastomotic strictures is stressed, especially when the study is done during micturition. Transrectal ultrasound is not so satisfying in the detection of pelvic recurrences, especially if they are smaller than 1 cm. In case of large masses digital examination is diagnostic itself. At last the Authors describe urinary incontinence and its etiology as a complication of radical prostatectomy. Particularly a surgical technique for vesico-urethral anastomosis proposed by Rocca Rossetti and its value in post-operative continence is described. The Authors show the results of transrectal ultrasound in the detection of striated urethral sphincter and its function after radical prostatectomy.
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PMID:[Radical prostatectomy: role of ultrasonography in the follow-up]. 141 94

A retrospective study of five years' experience with fourth-generation computerized tomography (CT) scan was undertaken to assess the frequency of understaging in prostate cancer. A total of 160 patients with preoperative scans were surgically staged. In 10 patients, the operation was aborted after pelvic node dissection had revealed unsuspected metastatic involvement. Based on the histopathologic evidence of local tumor invasion, extension into seminal vesicles or pelvic lymph nodes, restaging was required in 78 percent of cases. Accuracy was 24 percent for capsular extension, 69 percent for seminal vesicle invasion, and 72 percent for lymphadenopathy. The poor yield of CT scan as a preoperative staging modality is demonstrated. Recent advances in the understanding and management of prostatic cancer require reassessing patient benefit and cost effectiveness of available imaging techniques, focusing on the problem of detecting nodal metastases, and predicting tumor spread to regional lymph nodes by accurately evaluating the primary neoplasm. We conclude that CT scan fails to demonstrate the required precision needed to evaluate local tumor spread; therefore, this goal must be pursued with newer imaging modalities.
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PMID:Preoperative assessment of prostatic carcinoma by computerized tomography. Weaknesses and new perspectives. 141 54

Computed tomographic (CT) studies performed within a general oncology service in 104 consecutive patients with prostatic carcinoma were reviewed retrospectively to assess the incidence and distribution of lymphadenopathy. All patients were staged with CT at initial presentation, had normal skeletal scintigrams and were candidates for radical radiotherapy. The likelihood of lymphadenopathy was associated with increasing T-stage. 57 of the 92 (62%) patients without lymph node enlargement had local disease confined to the prostate (T2 or less) compared with only two of the 12 (17%) patients with enlarged nodes. Lymph node enlargement was more likely with a primary tumour of poorly differentiated histology. 12 patients (11.5%) had lymphadenopathy by established CT criteria; six with pelvic nodal enlargement alone and six with enlargement of pelvic and retroperitoneal nodes. In all patients pelvic nodal enlargement predominated and no patient had isolated retroperitoneal lymphadenopathy. Our findings indicate that CT staging studies of prostatic cancer do not need to include the retroperitoneum if there is no lymphadenopathy at or below the aortic bifurcation.
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PMID:CT evaluation of lymph node status at presentation of prostatic carcinoma. 154 45

A total of 321 patients with localized adenocarcinoma of the prostate treated by modified pelvic lymphadenectomy, Iridium-192 implant, and external beam iridium radiation were retrospectively reviewed. Analysis covered 8 years between 1981 and 1989 with a median population age of 72 (range 42 through 82 years). Disease-free survival for the entire group is 69% at 5 years with a median follow-up of 34 months (range 1.5 months to 98.5 months). As expected, both bulkier disease and positive nodal status adversely affected 5-year disease-free survival (p = 0.0001 for both). For tumors stage T1b (A2), T2a (B1), T2b (B2), T3 (C) the disease-free survival is 89.5%, 89.9%, 64.7%, and 48.8%, respectively; for NO disease 5-year disease-free survival is 76.5% versus N1/N2 disease with 5-year disease-free survival of 33.2%. Local control was excellent except for bulkier disease (p = 0.009). Tumors T1b, T2a, T2b, and T3 have 60-month local control rates of 95%, 93%, 83.6%, and 73.1%, respectively. Histologic grade also affected disease-free survival and local control with grade 1, grade 2, grade 3 showing 81.2%, 65.7%, and 45.1% disease-free survival at 5 years; and 93.6%, 82.2%, and 72.4% local control at 5 years. Estimates obtained using Kaplan-Meier method. Radiation induced morbidity was analyzed separately for all patients, there were 41 patients (13% of total) with 54 documented complications. There were no Grade 4 or 5 complications as per RTOG categories. Only 3 cases showed grade 3 complications (1%) and 51 cases showed grade 2 complications (15.9%). Grade 1 complications were not recorded. Of the grade 2 and grade 3 complications 30 were GU and 22 were rectal. The morbidity associated with combined interstitial implantation by transperineal percutaneous template and external beam iridium radiation for the localized prostate cancer is minimal with excellent local control and disease-free survival.
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PMID:Transperineal percutaneous iridium-192 interstitial template implant of the prostate: results and complications in 321 patients. 155 85


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