Prostate Cancer Treatment Benefits Debated
The latest update from a European study that has followed men with prostate cancer for more than a decade leaves the debate about the advantages of aggressive treatment versus "watchful waiting" undecided.

The findings were published in the Journal of the National Cancer Institute.
The advantage in survival seen for men who underwent surgery to remove the prostate gland disappeared after 10 years.
While deaths attributed to cancer continued to be lower among those having surgery, the overall death rate for both groups was the same, according to the researchers with the Scandinavian Prostate Cancer Group.
The meaning of the study for men now being diagnosed with prostate cancer is uncertain, because the study began before the use of testing for prostate-specific antigen (PSA), today's primary method of diagnosis, the researchers add.
"In settings with a large proportion of PSA-detected tumors, the relative reduction in risk of death following radical prostatectomy [removal of the gland] might be somewhat larger or similar to that in our study, but the absolute reduction would be smaller," they say.
Dr. Yu-Ning Wong, at Fox Chase Cancer Center in Philadelphia, says it is "unclear how these results apply to the patients we are taking care of today. They show how many questions remain unanswered."
Dr. Wong led a previous study that found an apparent benefit in survival for men who had aggressive surgical treatment of early prostate cancer. But it was not a randomized, controlled trial - the gold standard for medical research.
"Basically, I don't think we know the right answer about what to do," she says.
Prostate cancer is diagnosed in about one of every six American men. There is currently no way to distinguish between a cancer that will grow so slowly that it poses little danger to life from one that can grow aggressively enough to be fatal.
A common medical saying is that "more men die with their prostate cancer than of it."
Uncertainty about prostate cancer treatment has led to a new federal recommendation that men over 75 should not have PSA tests because the risks of treatment outweigh the benefits.
A final answer about whether surgery and other aggressive treatment is preferable to merely watching the course of the disease will not come for years, says Dr. Wong.
A controlled trial is under way in Europe, and one is planned for the US, she says.
Meanwhile, the decision about treatment versus watchful waiting must be made for each individual, explains Dr. Wong.
"I have discussions with a patient about his other medical conditions, his age, his willingness to receive treatment that may have long-term side effects, weighed against the risk that he may develop an aggressive cancer," she says.
Stephen Zeliadt, Ph.D., a research scientist at the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center in Seattle, says the new study "does provide evidence that intervention in the form of surgery does have a curative effect for some men. The question is, which men?"
Another question is whether the study results apply to "a screening population" of men who have PSA tests, notes Dr. Zeliadt. "With screening, you catch a lot of different types of cancer, and also at different ages. There is no information in the study on the age of detection."
So, Dr. Zeliadt adds, this study does not help solve the prostate cancer riddle.
"It probably makes it even more confusing," he says.
Dr. Peter T. Scardino, at Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center in New York City, says the study did offer an important finding: "The big benefit of treating potentially lethal prostate cancer comes early, in the first five to 10 years."
The study also "showed lots of benefits of surgery but did not find any benefit from surgery for men over the age of 65," he says.
Always consult your physician for more information. |
Prostate cancer is the most common cancer among men, excluding skin cancer.
American Cancer Society (ACS) estimates for 2008 include 186,320 new cases of prostate cancer in the US.
Year 2008 estimates include 28,660 deaths occurring from prostate cancer in the US alone, making it the second leading cause of cancer death in men.
All men are at risk for prostate cancer. The risk increases with age, and family history also increases the risk.
African-American men are more than twice as likely to have prostate cancer than Caucasian men, and nearly a two-fold higher mortality rate than Caucasian men.
There are usually no specific signs or symptoms of early prostate cancer - which is why prostate screening is so important.
An annual physical examination, prostate-specific antigen (PSA) blood test, and digital rectal exam (DRE) provide the best chance of identifying prostate cancer in its earliest stages.
The following are the most common symptoms of prostate cancer:
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weak or interrupted flow of urine
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urinating often (especially at night)
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difficulty urinating or holding back urine
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inability to urinate
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pain or burning when urinating
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blood in the urine or semen
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nagging pain in the back, hips, or pelvis
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difficulty having an erection
The symptoms of prostate cancer may resemble other conditions or medical problems.
As a man gets older, his prostate may grow bigger and obstruct the flow of urine, or interfere with sexual function.
An enlarged prostate gland - a condition called benign prostatic hyperplasia - may require treatment with medicine or surgery to relieve symptoms.
This common benign prostate condition, which is not cancer, can cause many of the same symptoms as prostate cancer.
Always consult your physician for more information.
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