157 research outputs found

    Clinical and surgical assistance in prostate cancer during the COVID-19 Pandemic: Implementation of assistance protocols

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    Purpose: Propose an approach of prostate cancer (PCa) patients during COVID-19 pandemic. Material and Methods: We conducted a review of current literature related to surgical and clinical management of patients during COVID-19 crisis paying special attention to oncological ones and especially those suffering from PCa. Based on these publications and current urological guidelines, a manual to manage PCa patients is suggested. Results: Patients suffering from cancer are likely to develop serious complications from COVID-19 disease together with an increased risk of postoperative morbidity and mortality. Therefore, the management of oncological patients should be taken into special consideration and most of the treatments postponed. In case the procedure is not deferrable, it should be adapted to the current situation. While the shortest radiotherapy (RT) regimens should be applied, surgical procedures must undergo the following recommendations proposed by main surgical associations. PCa prognosis is generally favourable and therefore one can safely delay most of the biopsies up to 6 months without interfering with survival outcomes in the vast majority of cases. In the same way, most of the localised PCa patients are suitable for active surveillance (AS) or hormonal therapy until local definitive treatment could be reconsidered. In metastatic as well as castration resistant PCa stages, adding androgen receptor targeted agents (abiraterone, apalutamide, darolutamide or enzalutamide) to androgen-deprivation therapy (ADT) could be considered in high risk patients. On the contrary, chemotherapy, immunotherapy and Radium-223 must be avoided with regard to the consequence of hematologic toxicity and risk of COVID-19 infection because of immunodepression. Conclusions: Most of the biopsies should be delayed while AS is advised in those patients with low risk PCa. ADT allows us to defer definitive local treatment in many cases of intermediate and high risk PCa. In regard to metastatic and castration resistant PCa, combination therapies with abiraterone, apalutamide, darolutamide or enzalutamide could be considered. Chemotherapy, Radium-223 and immunotherapy are discouraged

    Is the Toxicity of Salvage Prostatectomy Related to the Primary Prostate Cancer Therapy Received?

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    PURPOSE: To compare the toxicity profile and oncological outcome of salvage radical prostatectomy (SRP) following focal therapy (FT) versus SRP after radiation therapies (RT) - external beam radiation therapy (EBRT) or brachytherapy (BT). MATERIALS AND METHODS: Data concerning all men undergoing SRP for recurrent prostate cancer after either FT, EBRT or BT were retrospectively collected from 4 high volume surgical centres. The primary outcome measure of the study was toxicity of SRP characterized by any 30-day post-operative Clavien-Dindo complication rate, 12-month continence rate and 12-month potency rate. The secondary outcome was oncological outcome after SRP including positive margin rate and 12-month biochemical recurrence (BCR) rate. BCR was estimated using Kaplan-Meier methods and significant differences were calculated using a log rank test. Median follow-up time was 29.5 months. RESULTS: Between April 2007 and September 2018, 185 patients underwent SRP of which 95 had SRP after FT and 90 had SRP after RT, either EBRT or BT. SRP after RT was associated with a significantly higher 30-day Clavien-Dindo I-IV complication rate (34% vs 5%, p<0.001). At 12 months following surgery, patients undergoing SRP after FT had significantly better continence (SRP after FT:83% pad-free vs RT:49%) while potency outcomes were similar (FT:14% vs RT:11%). Men undergoing SRP after RT had a significantly higher stage and grade of disease together with a higher positive surgical margin rate (37% vs 13%, p=0.001). 3-year BCR after FT was 35% compared to 32% after RT, p=0.76. In multivariable analysis, men undergoing SRP after FT experienced a higher risk of BCR (HR 0.36 [0.18-0.82], p<0.005). CONCLUSIONS: This multicentre study demonstrates the toxicity of SRP in terms of perioperative complications and long-term urinary continence recovery is dependent on initial primary prostate cancer therapy received with men undergoing SRP after FT experiencing lower postoperative complication rates and better urinary continence outcomes

    The Role of Percentage of Prostate-specific Antigen Reduction After Focal Therapy Using High-intensity Focused Ultrasound for Primary Localised Prostate Cancer. Results from a Large Multi-institutional Series

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    Focal therapy (FT) for prostate cancer (PCa) is emerging as a novel therapeutic approach for patients with low- to intermediate-risk disease, in order to provide acceptable oncological control, whilst avoiding the side effects of radical treatment. Evidence regarding the ideal follow-up strategy and the significance of prostate-specific antigen (PSA) kinetics after treatment is needed. In this study, we aimed to assess the value of the percentage of PSA reduction (%PSA reduction) after FT in predicting the likelihood of any additional treatment or any radical treatment. We retrospectively analysed a multicentre cohort of 703 men receiving FT for low- and intermediate-risk PCa. Overall, the rates of any additional treatment and any radical treatment were 30% and 13%, respectively. The median follow-up period was 41 mo. The median %PSA reduction after FT was 73%. At Cox multivariable analysis, %PSA reduction was an independent predictor of any additional treatment (hazard ratio [HR]: 0.96; p 90%, the probability of any additional treatment within 5 yr was 20%. Conversely, for %PSA reduction of <10%, the probability of receiving any additional treatment within 5 yr was roughly 70%. This study is the first to assess the role of %PSA reduction in the largest multicentre cohort of men receiving FT for PCa. Given the lack of standardised follow-up strategies in the FT field, the use of the %PSA reduction should be considered

    Open Versus Robotic Cystectomy: A Propensity Score Matched Analysis Comparing Survival Outcomes

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    BACKGROUND: To assess the differential effect of robotic assisted radical cystectomy (RARC) versus open radical cystectomy (ORC) on survival outcomes in matched analyses performed on a large multicentric cohort. METHODS: The study included 9757 patients with urothelial bladder cancer (BCa) treated in a consecutive manner at each of 25 institutions. All patients underwent radical cystectomy with bilateral pelvic lymphadenectomy. To adjust for potential selection bias, propensity score matching 2:1 was performed with two ORC patients matched to one RARC patient. The propensity-matched cohort included 1374 patients. Multivariable competing risk analyses accounting for death of other causes, tested association of surgical technique with recurrence and cancer specific mortality (CSM), before and after propensity score matching. RESULTS: Overall, 767 (7.8%) patients underwent RARC and 8990 (92.2%) ORC. The median follow-up before and after propensity matching was 81 and 102 months, respectively. In the overall population, the 3-year recurrence rates and CSM were 37% vs. 26% and 34% vs. 24% for ORC vs. RARC (all p values > 0.1), respectively. On multivariable Cox regression analyses, RARC and ORC had similar recurrence and CSM rates before and after matching (all p values > 0.1). CONCLUSIONS: Patients treated with RARC and ORC have similar survival outcomes. This data is helpful in consulting patients until long term survival outcomes of level one evidence is available

    Laparoscopy in radical surgery of prostate cancer

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    Robot-assisted Versus Standard Laparoscopy for Simple Prostatectomy: Multicenter Comparative Outcomes

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    Objective To report a comparative analysis of laparoscopic simple prostatectomy (LSP) vs robot-assisted simple prostatectomy (RASP). Patients and Methods Consecutive cases of LSP and RASP done between 2003 and 2014 at 3 participating institutions were included in this retrospective analysis. The effectiveness of the two procedures was determined by performing a paired analysis of main functional and surgical outcomes. A multivariate analysis was also conducted to determine the factors predictive of "trifecta" outcome (combination of International Prostate Symptom Score 15 mL/second, and no perioperative complications). Results A total of 319 patients underwent minimally invasive simple prostatectomy at the participating institutions over the study period. Total prostate volume was larger in the RASP group (median 118.5 mL vs 109 mL, P =.02). Median estimated blood loss tended to be higher for LSP (300 mL vs 350 mL, P =.07). There was no difference in terms of catheterization time (P =.3) and hospital stay (P =.42). A higher rate of overall postoperative complications was recorded in the RASP group (17.7% vs 5.3%), but rate of major complications was not significantly different between the two techniques (2.3 vs 2.1, P =.6). Subjective and objective parameters significantly improved for both LSP and RASP. On multivariable analysis, only two factors were associated with likelihood of obtaining a favorable (trifecta) outcome: age (odds ratio: 0.94; P =.03) and body mass index (odds ratio: 0.84; P =.03). Conclusion Both LSP and RASP can be regarded as safe and effective minimally invasive surgical treatments for bladder outlet obstruction due to large prostate glands
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