Abstract

The purpose of this review is to highlight the most important developments in the diagnosis, prevention, and management of prostate cancer reported in the past year that have been published in the medical literature. Recent research has yielded important insights into the effects of lowering the serum prostate-specific antigen threshold for prostate biopsy on the incidence of prostate cancer and suggests that a cutoff value of 2.5 ng/mL would double the rate of diagnosis of the disease in young men. Other developments demonstrate that oral finasteride reduces the incidence of the disease but increases the proportion of high-grade tumors. The incidence of mutations of the androgen receptor gene has been shown to be lower than was previously thought. New randomized data suggest that for patients with high-risk localized prostate cancer treated with radiation, 4 months of androgen deprivation in combination with whole pelvis radiotherapy confers a clinical benefit. The clinical benefits associated with chemotherapy and supportive care therapies such as the bone targeting bisphosphonates continue to be refined. The data reported in the past year have widespread implications for all clinicians involved in the management of prostate cancer, ranging from primary care physicians who screen for and diagnose the disease to those who manage localized as well as systemic disease. Several of the year's findings will result in significant changes in the manner in which the disease is treated.

Highlights

  • This chapter presents the current state of prostate cancer epidemiology and compares data from different regions

  • Given that men aged 50-75 are at increased risk for both pros‐ tate cancer and colorectal cancer, preoperative prostate cancer screening in men who are planning Ab‐ dominoperineal resection (APR) allows for proper assessment of the prostate before access to the rectum is compromised, provides a baseline prostate specific antigen (PSA) to compare with further testing after the APR, and may detect synchronous malignancies

  • The median of flow rate test pretreatment in our study was 12.5 ml/s (3-30 ml/s) but acute urinary retention was seen in only 1 patient, requiring a temporary postimplant blad‐ der catheter during seven days, this results are better than other investigators [13,14,15,16]

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Summary

Introduction

We present the current state of prostate cancer epidemiology and compares data from different regions. Computer-based treatment planning, technological advances allowed for higher quality outpatient prostate brachytherapy [35]. HDR brachytherapy has been used as the brachytherapy component in combination with EBRT for the treatment of prostate cancer [84,85,86,87,88,89,90]. For this approach pa‐ tients undergo transperineal placement of afterloading catheters in the prostate under ultrasonographic guidance. Supported by preclinical and first clinical IAS results, several centers tested the feasibility of IAS in non-randomized groups of prostate cancer pa‐ tients with serum PSA as trigger point followed by a number of extended phase II and III trials [16,20]

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