Tuesday 31 March 2009

The Man, the Gland, the Dilemmas

Article from Wall Street Journal

You've been getting annual blood tests to check for prostate cancer. But two big studies in the New England Journal of Medicine just found that screening for PSA -- prostate specific antigen -- doesn't save many lives. Should you keep checking it?

Your biopsy was negative for prostate cancer but your PSA keeps rising. Should you stop worrying -- or have another biopsy?

You've been diagnosed with early-stage prostate cancer. It's probably harmless, but it could turn lethal. Should you just watch it or treat it aggressively and run the risk of impotence or incontinence?

Prostate cancer poses some of the most vexing questions in medicine, and one out of every six men in the U.S. will confront them at some point in their lives. Today's Health Journal is the first of a two-part series that aims to provide some guidance. This article looks at new diagnostic techniques that may help to resolve some of these quandaries. Next week we'll examine the perplexing array of treatment options and weigh the pros and cons of each.


Should You Be Screened?

For all the uproar they created, the recent NEJM studies settled little in the long-running debate over whether prostate-cancer screening is worthwhile.

PSA testing revolutionized detection of the disease in the late 1980s. Before that, doctors relied on a digital-rectal exam, or DRE, and by the time tumors could be felt, some were fairly large. Now, about 90% of prostate cancers are found at an early and highly curable stage.

But PSA screening can flag tumors almost too early, leading to considerable unnecessary surgery or radiation. Most prostate cancers are so small and slow-growing that they don't need treatment. Of the 185,000 U.S. men diagnosed with the disease each year, an estimated 85% would likely die of something else long before their cancer caused problems.

On the other hand, some prostate cancers are aggressive, each year killing some 28,000 men in the U.S. -- and 288,000 worldwide -- who weren't treated in time. It's the second most deadly cancer in men, after lung cancer.

As of now, it's difficult to tell which patients have which kind of tumors in the early stages. Experts say many more men could safely opt for "watchful waiting" -- monitoring their cancers to see if they grow. But thousands of men each year opt to have their prostates removed surgically or treated with radiation to be on the safe side, and many live with urinary or erectile problems in the bargain.

"Right now we are treating people for anxiety, not cancer," says Faina Shtern, CEO of the AdMeTech Foundation, a nonprofit group that is lobbying Congress to increase federal funding for research into prostate imaging. "We do not know if they will benefit from treatment, but we know they will have complications," Dr. Shtern says.

Weighing all those factors, a U.S. government panel last year recommended that doctors stop screening men age 75 and over for prostate cancer, since the risk of treating it likely outweighed the benefits.

The recent NEJM studies seemed to extend that reasoning to younger men as well. One study of 77,000 North American men showed that regular PSA screening didn't save a significant number of lives over 10 years. A study of 182,000 European men showed a 20% reduction in deaths among those screened regularly. But in that study, 48 men had to be treated for every life saved.

Still, many cancer organizations issued statements defending PSA testing -- in the absence of something better -- and urging men to discuss it with their doctors.

Most doctors believe that men with a family history of prostate cancer should have annual PSA testing, along with African-American men, for whom the death rate from prostate cancer is twice as high as for whites. For others, "you probably don't have to get it tested every year," says Al Barqawi, a urologist at the University of Colorado Health Sciences Center. "If there's a change, then do it more often."


"Blind" Biopsies

A PSA level is cause for concern if it's higher than usual for the man's age or rising rapidly. If so, the next step is usually a biopsy. That's typically done in a urologist's office with an ultrasound probe and a spring-loaded needle gun inserted into the rectum, taking six to 12 samples at random.

The ultrasound can't see well into the prostate, so urologists are effectively sampling blindly. More than 1.2 million American men have such transrectal ultrasound, or TRUS, biopsies each year due to a suspicious PSA level. Less than 15% come back positive for cancer. But TRUS biopsies miss about 20% of cancers, so a negative biopsy isn't completely reassuring.

That's the situation Richard Edelman, president and chief executive of the Edelman public-relations firm, faced in 2007. His PSA had doubled over two years to four nanograms/milliliter, considered elevated for his age of 54. He also had three close relatives with prostate cancer. A standard TRUS biopsy was negative, but a few months later, his PSA had jumped to 7.5 ng/ml.

His doctor suspected a urinary-tract infection, one of several benign conditions that can increase the PSA level, and prescribed an antibiotic. But Mr. Edelman's PSA remained elevated, as did his anxiety.

To get more information, Mr. Edelman enrolled in a clinical trial at the National Cancer Institute, where doctors are hoping to improve tumor detection by scanning prostates with magnetic-resonance imaging. The MRI scans are then used to target biopsies at suspicious-looking areas. Mr. Edelman had a second biopsy, guided by MRI, which found cancer in two of 21 samples. "The value of the MRI was huge," he says.

Imaging of the prostate has lagged far behind imaging for breast cancer in women -- largely because the prostate is deep inside the pelvis and harder to access. "It's medieval and barbaric what we do to men without better imaging," says AdMeTech's Dr. Shtern, who helped advance the use of MRIs for breast cancer at the NCI in the 1990s. She notes that NCI today spends twice as much on research into breast cancer than prostate cancer research, even though prostate cancer is twice as prevalent. Mr. Edelman's firm is helping her group's efforts; as are some equipment manufacturers.

Researchers at NCI and several major medical centers are currently using several kinds of advanced MRIs to scan the prostate for abnormalities that could signal cancer. MRIs with contrast agents can highlight areas of new blood-vessel growth. Other techniques include MR spectroscopy, which looks for telltale chemical changes, and diffusion-weighted MRIs, which measure changes in water flow around cells. Clinical trials are underway to assess whether biopsies guided by such images are better than standard TRUS biopsies at finding cancers.

"None of these tests will absolutely differentiate benign from malignant. They're pointers to areas that should be further biopsied or followed," says Peter Choyke, the NCI's chief of molecular imaging.

MRIs often identify abnormalities that aren't cancerous. They also add $1,000 or more to the cost of a biopsy, which itself runs about $2,000. But Dr. Shtern argues that scanning before performing a biopsy could save money in the long run if it helps to reduce the $2 billion spent annually on standard biopsies that don't find cancer.

"It sounds good, but the burden of proof is on us to show that this makes a difference in detecting cancers," says Peter Pinto, director of the fellowship program at NCI's urologic oncology branch.


Has it Spread?

Once a biopsy confirms cancer, many major medical centers now use MRIs to help determine whether it has spread beyond the prostate and invaded the nearby nerves and blood vessels involved in sexual function and urination. That information can be crucial if a patient is considering surgery, radiation or watchful waiting.

More often, doctors are playing probabilities to determine whether early-stage cancers have spread beyond the prostate. Some use mathematical formulas based on a combination of PSA levels, a DRE and what's known as a Gleason score, a measure of a cancer's aggressiveness based on the pattern of abnormal cells seen on the biopsy.

And doctors often disagree about what that information signifies. In Mr. Edelman's case, one counseled watchful waiting since his Gleason score was a moderate six. Another doctor suspected Mr. Edelman's cancer had already spread, based on his PSA, and urged radiation and hormone therapy. At Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center in New York, Mr. Edelman had a second MRI that revealed that his cancer was still confined to the prostate, but was on both sides of the gland and had grown since the first MRI scan.

He opted for a radical prostatectomy last fall -- and he thinks he caught the cancer just in time. "I'm told I have more than a 95% chance of being around for a long time," he says. His last PSA was down to zero.

Doctors who use MRIs caution they aren't always definitive and can't see very small cancers, but even that can be useful. "If I don't see anything on an MRI, it helps reassure me you probably don't have a large, life-threatening cancer." says Peter Scardino, chief of urology at Memorial Sloan-Kettering.

"We are all like the blind men feeling the elephant," Dr. Scardino adds. "I don't rely just on the DRE, the PSA, the biopsy results or the MRI. But if we put all that information together, we can get a pretty good idea of what's going on."


Playing 'Battleship'

Rather than rely on imaging, a small but growing group of urologists prefer to bombard the prostate with more extensive biopsies. A "3D-mapping biopsy" takes 50 or more samples, five millimeters apart, throughout the gland. The needles are inserted through a grid that allows doctors to pinpoint the size, shape and location of any cancers. Practitioners liken it to playing the game Battleship with the prostate. Unlike a standard biopsy done through the rectum, a mapping biopsy is performed through the skin behind the scrotum with the patient under anesthesia.

The cost of a 3D-mapping biopsy is $5,000 to $6,000, due to the extensive pathology needed. They're far too costly and cumbersome for routine screening. But the technique can provide valuable information for making treatment decisions, and is increasingly covered by insurance and Medicare.

In the last three years, Dr. Barqawi at the University of Colorado has performed two hundred 3D-mapping biopsies on patients after they had had TRUS biopsies. Of them, 96 learned that their cancers were more extensive than the first biopsy showed. But 33 patients were reassured that their cancers were small and could just be watched.

Dr. Barqawi says 60 of the patients getting mapping biopsies learned that their tumors were so localized that they opted for new treatments known as targeted focal therapies. With these, doctors are able to destroy just the tumor with cryosurgery or specialized ultrasound and leave the rest of the prostate alone.

"Knowledge is power and that's especially true when managing patients diagnosed with early-stage disease to avoid un-needed surgeries," Dr. Barqawi says.


Molecular Markers

Scientists are also making headway in finding new molecular markers that may be able to signify not just the presence of cancer, but what its lethal potential is.

Researchers at the University of Michigan have identified a molecular waste product of tumors, called sarcosine, that is elevated in the urine of men with advanced prostate cancers. Researchers at Memorial Sloan-Kettering and elsewhere are studying circulating tumor cells -- bits of cancer cells that break off and enter the blood stream -- that may be able to indicate whether cancer has the potential to metastasize.

Some patients have more than one kind of prostate cancer, and scientists are developing PET scans and radioactive dyes that may one day be able to make different kinds of tumors light up like colored Christmas lights -- yellow for benign, red for really lethal.

"We've got potentially game-changing biomarkers that could get us out of the dilemma we are in with PSA," says oncologist Jonathan Simons, president of the Prostate Cancer Foundation, which funds some of that research. With the recent NEJM studies, he says, "We've been reminded again of how much work we need to do."



Monday 30 March 2009

Prostate Cancer, Fatigue and Exercise

Several different types of treatment are available for patients with prostate cancer. For most men with early-stage prostate cancer, either surgery or radiation treatment may be selected (in some cases, both types of therapy may be indicated). Each treatment option has its own specific range of potential risks and benefits, and patients should be careful to obtain a full discussion from their doctor regarding the most appropriate treatment for their prostate cancer before making a decision.

For men who choose radiation therapy as the primary treatment for their prostate cancer, a new prospective clinical research study provides important information regarding the role of resistance and aerobic fitness training (also known in some circles as “exercise”) in reducing fatigue and other side effects of prostate cancer treatment.

This study, newly published in the Journal of Clinical Oncology, randomized 121 prostate cancer patients undergoing radiation therapy into 3 groups. The first group of 41 men was not assigned to any fitness training sessions, and this group of men agreed not to initiate an exercise program during the 24-week period of observation. The second group of 40 men was assigned to resistance training for a period of 24 weeks.

Resistance training was conducted 3 times per week, and for those of you who are exercise aficionados, the resistance routine consisted of performing two sets of 8 to12 repetitions of 10 different exercises (leg extension, leg curl, seated chest fly, latissimus pull-downs, overhead press, triceps extension, biceps curls, calf raises, low back extension, and modified curl-ups). Resistance weights were then increased by 5 pounds when participants completed more than 12 repetitions. Finally, the 40 men in the third group were randomized to aerobic exercise training for a period of 24 weeks.

The aerobic training was also conducted 3 times per week, and consisted of aerobic work-outs using a cycle ergometer, treadmill, or elliptical trainer. Exercise duration began at 15 minutes and was then increased by 5 minutes, every 3 weeks, until it reached 45 minutes. Exercise intensity was standardized using heart rate monitors.

At the end of the 24-week study period, all patient volunteers were assessed for fatigue using a validated cancer therapy fatigue scale. The results of this study indicated that both resistance training and aerobic exercise significantly reduced short-term levels of fatigue in prostate cancer patients when compared to similar patients who did not participate in fitness training.

Interestingly, resistance training appeared to provide a longer duration of fatigue reduction when compared to aerobic fitness training in this cohort of middle-aged and elderly men with prostate cancer. Moreover, resistance training not only improved upper and lower body strength, as expected, but it also reduced triglyceride levels in the blood and improved aerobic fitness levels as well.

The men who were assigned to the aerobic training group also experienced an improvement in aerobic fitness levels, as expected but, as already noted, they did not appear to experience some of the other health benefits that were observed among the resistance training group.

Aerobic fitness training was not only less effective in providing long-term fatigue reduction, but was also, not surprisingly, less effective in improving muscle strength when compared to resistance training (anecdotally, one of the men assigned to the aerobic fitness training group actually experienced a serious adverse health event as a result of aerobic fitness training).

This is an interesting study, and for a couple of reasons. Cancer diagnosis and treatment is very often accompanied by varying degrees of anxiety, depression, and fatigue. We already know that the severity of these cancer-associated affective disorders can be significantly reduced with even moderate levels of exercise.

However, the conventional thinking among most exercise physiologists has been that aerobic exercise is the most effective means of attaining good cardiovascular health, as well as all of the other ancillary health benefits that arise from a good cardiovascular work-out (including reductions in anxiety, depression and fatigue).

In this small prospective study, a graduated program of resistance training appeared to provide not only increased upper and lower body strength, as expected, but also appeared to provide a longer lasting reduction in fatigue levels while also simultaneously improving aerobic fitness. (Unfortunately, this study did not include a fourth group of men who were randomized to undergo both aerobic and resistance training at the same time.)

As a follow-up to this excellent but small prospective clinical study, I would like to see a large cohort of patients and a longer duration of follow-up. I would also like to see that fourth group added, as well.

However, for patients with joint or mobility limitations that preclude moderately vigorous aerobic exercise on a frequent basis, this small study of cancer patients suggests, as have other studies, that a progressive and frequent weight training program can provide both improved muscle strength and significant improvements in aerobic fitness. Other recent non-cancer studies looking at resistance training for older patients have also confirmed clinically significant improvements in body strength, agility, balance and overall vigor.

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Saturday 28 March 2009

Digital rectal prostate exam a ritual of doctor-patient bonding, for good and bad

The practice, and its awkwardness, will come less often into play as U.S. Preventive Services Task Force guidelines now advise against it for men age 75 and over.

By Anna B. Reisman

November 3, 2008

In August, the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force, a government-sponsored panel of medical experts, issued new recommendations regarding prostate cancer screening: Men ages 75 and over should no longer be screened for prostate cancer with the PSA blood test or digital rectal exam.

An unexpected benefit may be an improvement in the doctor-patient relationship. The rectal exam can be one of the odder moments between a patient and his doctor. Not long ago, for example, I saw a 75-year-old for his routine annual visit. Things were not going well for him.

His wife's dementia was worsening daily. She would leave the stove on, accuse him of stealing her things, holler at him day and night. And yet he could not imagine putting her in a nursing home.

His eyes, usually sparkling with delight, were dull. As I examined his heart and lungs, neck and belly, ankles and feet, he heaved a long sigh. I felt gloomy about his wretched situation.

I must have been preoccupied, because when it was time for the rectal exam, I bumbled my words. I asked him to lower his pants, but instead of saying "Lie on the table," I told him to lie on the floor. The patient and I burst out laughing.

Still chuckling, I stepped out of the room so he could get ready. To be sure, my bumble had brought levity to a traditionally awkward moment -- but why, I asked myself, did this encounter have to end with an examination of his anus?

I was drawn to primary-care medicine by the human connection that comes with the white coat and stethoscope, the prospect of people willing to share their everyday thoughts and deepest secrets, and their expectation that I would use this information to help them.

What I didn't fully grasp was that this intimacy also had a critical physical component -- one that came gloved and lubed.

I'd never imagined that performing rectal exams would become a daily reality. Most of my patients are men over 50, which means that I ask them if they'd like to be screened for prostate cancer.

Some inquire whether the PSA (prostate-specific antigen) blood test alone will suffice. I explain that it's most informative to have both the PSA and the digital exam: Some cancers hide in prostate nodules in men whose PSA readings are normal.

So for men under 75 and over 50 (earlier for higher-risk men) who wish to be screened, just as important as the PSA is the old-fashioned, low-tech way with a pair of rubber gloves, a foil packet of lubricating jelly and an index finger.

For years I didn't feel confident in my ability to do a good rectal exam. In medical school, we spent about two months learning the heart exam, maybe one month on the lungs. The rectal exam was granted a single session.

Not surprising: It's one thing for a parade of students to line up, stethoscopes ready, at the bedside of a chatty patient with a heart murmur; it's quite another to find a patient willing to roll over and endure a series of rectal exams by unskilled, anonymous fingers. The result: a culture of squeamishness.

During residency, I did a lot of rectal exams and tried to get a sense of the prostate's normal size and consistency. But often I wasn't sure of myself. Was a slight asymmetry a normal variant or something worrisome?

I probably sent too many patients to urologists earlier in my career because of my self-doubt, but that was better, I suppose, than missing something.

And although plenty of men will hop onto the exam table without hesitation, there's no shortage of reluctant and nay-saying patients, of awkward silences followed by excuses.

One patient I recall stole a glance at my hands, the muscles in his face relaxing ever-so-slightly when he looked at my fingers. "My old doctor," he said, "had thick fingers, like sausages."

Another said, "My other doctor did one a few months ago, I think." And another, "Next time, I promise." Many opt for the PSA without the rectal exam.

Back in my exam room, the patient lay on the exam table in a fetal position, pants down, buttocks exposed, testicles dangling.

I examined his rectal area for internal hemorrhoids, the subtle edge of an anal fissure, the flat cauliflower of an anal wart, and found none.

I touched the precise spot of the anal skin that elicits the mischievously named "anal wink reflex," a test of nerve function. I dabbed my finger with the jelly and eased it in against the muscular resistance until I touched the prostate.

To feel the whole prostate and distinguish between its two lobes, I bent my knees, turned my arm upside down and swiveled my finger to reach the other side of the gland. It was the size of an apricot, smooth and rubbery.

As usual, I grimaced: The rectum has muscles that clench and unclench at the slightest sensation, and it always feels odd to have my finger locked in that tight embrace. It doesn't get more intimate than this.

Then I closed my eyes and focused on all of the nerve endings packed closely in my fingertip. As my finger swept the prostate gland, I felt its normal consistency, its symmetry and, to my relief, not a single nodule.

It was almost a Zen moment: worlds of otherwise hidden information uncovered through careful probing -- earlier, via conversation; now, via a digit.

I wiped my finger on the stool-sample card and discarded my gloves. The old man looked over his shoulder from the table, the twinkle in his eyes returned. "Does this mean we're friends?"

There's nothing like an awkward joke to defuse an awkward moment. But thanks to the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force, there may now be fewer of both.

Thursday 26 March 2009

My Sentiments Exactly

With a Buzz Cut, I Can Take on Anything

GOT a buzz cut last July, four days before radical open surgery to remove my cancerous prostate. I told family and friends that I did it for reasons of ease and style: I wanted to avoid the heartbreak of hospital hair, that lank and greasy thatch that repels visitors.

But I was lying.

In a time of utter vulnerability — having already weathered three months of post-diagnosis ups-and-downs — I needed the primal ferocity that a buzz cut proclaims. I needed to look like a soccer thug or an extra from “Prison Break” to help get me through surgery, the physical indignities of post-op life, and my subsequent radiation and hormone therapy. I still do. My prostate cancer and its treatment have transformed me — in body and spirit — and the buzz cut has helped me cope with those changes.

I agree with the late Anatole Broyard, who wrote in his memoir “Intoxicated by My Illness,” “It seems to me that every seriously ill person needs to develop a style for his illness.” And the buzz is what I want to wear, what I need to wear, in this wicked waltz with cancer.

I’m an optimist, but not a day goes by in which I don’t wonder whether I’m going to die before I ever imagined. The buzz cut helps me scowl, glower and say “No!” to that thought.

Broyard, a New York Times literary critic who died of prostate cancer, also wrote, “Only by insisting on your style can you keep from falling out of love with yourself as the illness attempts to diminish or disfigure you.”

In some ways, I’ve already fallen out of love with my old self.

There’s a book-jacket photo taken of me early last year, before I learned that I had cancer, and I can’t stand to look at it. Can’t bear to look at my floppy mop of Glen Campbell hair, the innocent grin. I want to smack that cheery and naïve face and bellow: “Boy, you don’t know nothin’!”

That poor guy, at age 50, doesn’t yet know that he has cancer, that it will prove to be shockingly aggressive and that, among other indignities, his libido will take a sabbatical (on Ibiza, I hope).

For me, the buzz cut is a visible bulwark against the tide of emasculating side effects caused by the treatment for prostate cancer.

Wearing my buzz, hiking boots and a rugby shirt, I don’t feel like prey to the cancer. I can still fix my wife with my blue eyes, drop my voice into a Barry White register, and say, “Hey, baby.”

It was only after the fact that I learned that my hair-shearing reaction to having cancer wasn’t so unusual. I understood that the buzz cut spoke of a new me. It still reminds me that I’ve been tempered in the crucible of cancer, that I have changed.

But it’s also part of a muted tradition that’s consistent with the transformation, transition and trauma that I’ve gone through.

Nuns and monks cut their hair, as do saints and rape victims. Soldiers, prisoners and mental patients have their hair cut for them. And issues of hair and appearance are often uppermost in the minds of cancer patients.

“The challenge with cancer is to find a new sense of self,” said Dr. Robert Klitzman, an associate professor of clinical psychiatry at Columbia University Medical Center, “because the narrative of yourself has been disrupted.”

Dr. Klitzman, who has explored issues of serious illness and appearance in several books, most recently “When Doctors Become Patients,” added, “Often, when a woman wears a scarf instead of a wig, she’s owning her cancer, not resisting it.”

That idea of ownership is crucial. My treatment hasn’t made my hair fall out, but partly I wear the buzz to show solidarity with my sisters-and-brothers-in-disease who have no choice.

And the buzz lets me set the social terms of how I face the disease. I’m not interested in the wan and weepy Romanticism of the 19th century in which the patient stoutly wastes away in a soft bed of pity-whispers.

I’m not interested, either, in keeping stoic secrets, in which cancer becomes the fetus of shame buried in the root cellar, or the insane uncle shut in the attic of fear.

Secrets were an epidemic in my rural New Hampshire family — silences about cancer and alcoholism, about bastards and near-bastards — and those secrets and silences killed people.

The buzz grants me the power to look people in the eye and matter-of-factly say: “I have cancer.” Most people who know me will tell you that my current feral style — looking like some vintage N.F.L. middle linebacker — doesn’t reflect my personality.

I am basically a cream puff. But I like the contradiction, the tension, that the buzz cut seems to represent between my inner and outer lives.

The buzz cut is a kind of veil or, perhaps, a mask hiding my secret identities: one of which is being a cancer patient.

But to be honest, I don’t think I’m hiding anyone. We are, all of us, a bundle of apparent contradictions. Even though I’m a dreamy pragmatist, I need the guy with the glare, the shaved skull and the brutishly broad forehead to help me through the day.

I walk into Balonze Barber Shop in Upper Montclair, N.J., every three weeks and tell the owner, Dennis, that I want the “one-zero” buzz, which is even shorter and tighter than the traditional No.1.

As I settle into the familiar chair, Dennis clicks the blade into place, then flicks on the shears. In a way, that chair and the soothing hum of the clippers are just as important a part of my cancer treatment as the TomoTherapy machine in which I received my seven weeks of radiation.

I revel in the smell of alcohol and shaving cream, shiver at the scritch-scratch-scritch of the straight-edge razor on my neck and sideburns. Dennis is preparing me for the next three weeks, the way James Bond gets prepped for a mission.

Besides the faux surface ferocity, the buzz cut also energizes me, puts an extra bounce in my step. And that metamorphosis also carries me back to childhood, when I’d get my summer “whiffle” cut.

So, too, it’s oddly redolent of the Monkees, neighborhood stickaburr fights and going to the stock car races at Star Speedway in Epping, N.H.

In the Bible, Jacob was renamed Israel after wrestling with an angel of the Lord. And, after wrestling with the dark angel of prostate cancer, I, too, have a new name: Cancer Patient and eventually, I hope, Cancer Survivor.

A new name demands a new look, a new style. In my case, it demands the “one-zero” buzz.

3D Mapping for Prostate Biopsies

SAN DIEGO, March 10 -- Prostate biopsies that sample tissue mapped in three dimensions may improve treatment planning and safely allow for a "lumpectomy" approach, researchers said.

Stage and grade revisions with 3-D mapping biopsy were substantial enough to change management for more than 70% of patients, compared with standard transrectal ultrasound (TRUS)-guided biopsy, according to Gary Onik, M.D., of Florida Hospital's Center for Safer Prostate Cancer Therapy in Orlando, and colleagues.

For tumors found with this more extensive biopsy method, targeted cryoablation achieved long-term local control without incontinence in all patients, according to a second study reported by the same group here at the Society of Interventional Radiology meeting.

"Almost every patient who is diagnosed with prostate cancer, except for those who, on their transrectal ultrasound biopsy, showed extensive high-grade disease, needs a mapping biopsy to fully evaluate their situation and treat them appropriately," Dr. Onik said.


Brian Stainken, M.D., of Roger Williams Hospital in Providence, R.I., and SIR president, agreed that the promising findings could be "game changing."

However, he sounded a note of caution in response to Dr. Onik's enthusiasm by emphasizing the need for further validation.

Dr. Onik, anticipating this argument, noted that the low morbidity rate -- no incontinence and 15% impotence in his study -- has been replicated in two other published studies.

These results were more impressive given that more than half of his 120 cryoablation patients with one to 13 years of follow-up were moderate- to high-risk or radiation failure cases, he said.

Likewise, morbidity was minimal with the 3-D mapping biopsy. The only complications were self-limiting hematuria (1.2%) and retention (7%).

These biopsies were done under transrectal ultrasound guidance, with tissue sampled every 5 mm throughout the prostate volume, using a brachytherapy grid. Careful labeling of specimen coordinates allowed the radiologist to reconstruct a detailed picture of the extent and location of the tumor.

Dr. Onik's group used this biopsy method for 180 men who were considering conservative management based on prior standard transrectal ultrasound biopsy that showed unilateral prostate cancer.

But the more extensive 3-D mapping biopsy showed bilateral disease in 55% of patients and increased the Gleason score for 22%.

The researchers estimated that at least 70% of the patients would have a change in therapeutic decision based on the more accurate staging.

It wasn't surprising that this technique beat transrectal ultrasound biopsy, Dr. Onik said. Although the gold standard for prostate biopsy, "we have known for decades that this is not an accurate way of staging prostate cancer," he said, "but it was the only thing we had."

In addition to helping patients decide between watchful waiting and more aggressive therapy, pinpointing the tumor can allow for a more nuanced treatment approach similar to the revolution in breast cancer surgery, Dr. Onik said.

"More than 25 years ago women were in exactly the same situation men are in now," he said. "The treatment was radical mastectomy."


With this as an inspiration, Dr. Onik's group started to pursue what he called "male lumpectomy" with focal cryoablation informed by 3-D mapping biopsy.

With this approach, their study showed that among the very high-risk radiation failure patients, 81% maintained stable prostate-specific antigen levels during follow-up after focal treatment.

In the total cohort, stable PSA rates with no evidence of cancer were reported for 93% by ASTRO criteria and 94% by Phoenix criteria.

Overall, eight patients were retreated to yield a 100% local control rate with targeted cryoablation.

Regardless of the risk level of prostate cancer patients, the biochemical recurrence rate did not climb over time and compared favorably to the 55% rate at 10 years in a prior study of high-risk patients who had radical prostatectomy.

Potency was maintained in 85% of patients potent prior to the procedure and of 120 patients without previous prostate surgery, all were continent (no pads).

Although local control has been thought to have little impact on overall survival in prostate cancer, Dr. Onik said that recent evidence has shown that better control of cancer in the prostate reduces risk of distant metastases and mortality.

The next step will be to compare "male lumpectomy" to robotic radical prostatectomy, he said.

Primary source: Society of Interventional Radiology

Source reference:

Onik G, et al "3D prostate mapping biopsy has a potentially significant impact on prostate cancer management" SIR 2009; Abstract 198.

Additional source: Society of Interventional Radiology

Source reference:

Onik G, et al "Focal therapy for prostate cancer -- 120 patients with up to 12-year follow-up" SIR 2009; Abstract 75.

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Wednesday 25 March 2009

The Impossible Calculus of PSA Testing

New York Times editor Dana Jennings writes every Tuesday about coping with an advanced form of prostate cancer.

By Dana Jennings


Prostate cancer and its treatment breed anger and confusion among the men who have it and those who love them. And in the wake of studies released last week that question the value of screening for prostate cancer, I find myself even angrier and more confused.

I’m angry because the two studies confirm my gut feeling – based on comments to this blog and on the stories of many men I know – that millions of men, especially those in their late 60s and beyond, have received unnecessary prostate cancer treatments that have, at the very least, damaged their bodies and lives, if not outright ruined them.

I’m confused because I’m the statistical exception. I’m the one man in 49 whose life may have been saved because I had the PSA blood test. Most prostate cancers are slow and lazy. But my doctors and I learned after I had my prostate surgically removed last July that my cancer was shockingly aggressive. There’s a good chance that it would’ve killed me if I hadn’t been screened. And, to be blunt, it might yet.

Basically, the two large studies – one American, one European – found that screening tests for PSA, or prostate specific antigen, do a great job of discovering prostate cancer. But that knowledge doesn’t translate into many lives saved, the studies state, and for many men it can lead to needless treatment that diminishes quality of life.

My biggest problem with the studies – and, of course, this is the nature of such studies – is that they reduce me and all my brothers-in-disease to abstractions, to cancer-bearing ciphers. Among those dry words, we are not living, breathing and terrified men, but merely our prostate cancers, whether slow or bold.

The most chilling sentence I’ve read in the past week is this one from The New York Times: “In each study, the two groups were followed for more than a decade while researchers counted deaths from prostate cancers, asking whether screening made a difference.”

The researchers counted “deaths,” not men who had died. As Charlie Brown once said to Lucy as she detailed his baseball team’s shortcomings: “Tell your statistics to shut up.”

My own experience with prostate cancer started pretty typically. My PSA was elevated more than a year ago. That fact led to a biopsy last spring, and on April 7 I learned that I had prostate cancer.

It was determined that my cancer was a probable Stage 1, and that my Gleason score was a 6 or 7 on a scale of 10, with 10 being the worst possible number. It appeared that I had an “ordinary” case of prostate cancer. My doctors recommended surgery. In my case, because of previous operations, I had a radical open prostatectomy.

Now, cancer is a powerful card for any doctor to play. Cancer is a serpent in our bodies that we cannot abide. When most of us learn that we have cancer, we want it out right now. We want it annihilated. And for me, surgery was the right decision, because it was only through the post-op pathology report that we learned that my cancer was an aggressive Stage 3 – a T3B – and that my Gleason was an ominous 9. I was actually that somewhat rare man who could die from prostate cancer, not just with prostate cancer. There are still about 30,000 men who die each year from the disease.

Even so, I will still tell you that I was damaged by the surgery, with impotence and incontinence being the major issues; those were also complicated by my follow-up treatments of radiation and hormone therapy.

And given the findings in these two studies, if my case had been typical, if the cancer had been the slow-growth kind and confined to the prostate, I would feel like an absolute fool for having gone through the physical indignities caused by surgery.

Doctors can tell you and tell you that impotence and incontinence are probable side effects. But until you actually experience them as man trying to regain his life, you have no idea what those multisyllabic curses truly mean.

In our competitive medical marketplace, there is no shortage of surgeons out there who aggressively promote themselves and who do a volume business in prostates. But these two studies indicate that maybe that volume should be reduced.

So, I sit here in limbo. And I wonder whether I’ll be that rare man who ducks death from a cancer that would’ve killed him – because I got screened. But all I can confess to you, in all honesty, is this: I’m still angry and confused.

Fatty Fish May Cut Prostate Cancer Risk


Study Shows Eating Fish High in Omega-3s Reduces Risk of Aggressive Prostate Cancer - By Salynn Boyles

WebMD Health News: Reviewed by Michael W. Smith

MD March 24, 2009 -- Men who eat salmon and other fish high in omega-3 fatty acids on a regular basis have a decreased risk for developing advanced prostate cancer, new research suggests.

The association was most pronounced among men believed to have a genetic predisposition for developing aggressive prostate cancer.

Men in the study who ate one or more servings of fatty fish a week were found to have a 63% lower risk for developing aggressive prostate cancer than men who reported never eating fish, study co-researcher John S. Witte, PhD, tells WebMD.

The study is not the first to find that men who eat fatty fish have a lower risk for the most deadly forms of prostate cancer. But Witte says clinical trials are needed to show that eating foods high in omega-3 fatty acids actually lower risk of aggressive prostate cancer.


The study appears in the April issue of Clinical Cancer Research.

"There is a lot of evidence that omega-3 fatty acids protect against heart disease and other diseases by targeting inflammation -- and that may be what is going on here," Witte says.


Omega-3 and Prostate Cancer

The study by Witte and colleagues from the University of California, San Francisco, included 466 men with aggressive prostate cancer and 478 men without the cancer.

The men were asked to fill out food-frequency questionnaires. Genetic analysis was also performed to identify variants of the Cox-2 gene, which helps regulate inflammation within the body. A certain variant of this gene is also known to increase the chance of developing prostate cancer.

The analysis revealed that men who ate little to no fatty fish and had a specific Cox-2 variant were five times more likely to develop advanced prostate cancer.

But men with the highest intake of omega-3 fatty acids -- equivalent to one or more servings of fatty fish a week -- had a significantly reduced risk for advanced disease, even when they carried the Cox-2 variant.

"The increase in risk associated with having the Cox-2 variant was essentially reversed in men who ate fish one or more times a week," Witte says.


Clinical Trials Needed

Omega-3 researcher Jorge Chavarro, PhD, of Harvard Medical School tells WebMD that the findings are consistent with his own studies of omega-3 and prostate cancer.

In a 2007 study, Chavarro and colleagues with the Harvard School of Public Health reported a 41% reduction in prostate cancer risk among men who ate higher levels of omega-3s than men with the lowest intake.

In separate studies, the Harvard team found that men who ate fatty fish before being diagnosed with prostate cancer and after their diagnosis were less likely to die of the disease.

Chavarro's research also suggests that omega-3 is particularly protective against the most aggressive prostate cancers.

He tells WebMD that this supports the growing belief that prostate cancer is a more complex disease than previously thought.

"We call everything prostate cancer, but clinically aggressive cancers and more localized, benign cancers may be two very different diseases," he says. "In the past we have studied overall disease. But it may be that the effects of fish and other anti-inflammatory interventions, like Cox-2-targeting drugs, affect only aggressive disease."

Roswell Park Cancer Institute President and professor of oncology Donald Trump, MD, tells WebMD that there is enough evidence suggesting a protective role for omega-3 against prostate cancer to justify a large trial studying whether eating a diet rich in omega-3s -- or even taking omega-3 supplements -- can actually lower risk of prostate cancer.

"This is a very nicely done study, but we definitely need a clinical trial," he says. "These results suggest that we may be able to identify men who will be most likely to benefit and least likely to benefit from this intervention."


Fish rich in omega-3 fatty acids include:

  • Halibut
  • Herring
  • Mackerel
  • Oysters
  • Salmon
  • Sardines
  • Trout

Sunday 22 March 2009

The PSA Test. Is It Worth It?


Sunday March 22, 2009

The results of two large research studies that sought to evaluate the worth of the PSA test were recently published in the New England Journal of Medicine.

Both studies looked back over a number of years to determine whether men who had undergone PSA and digital rectal exam screening for prostate cancer actually had lower rates of death from prostate cancer than men who hadn't undergone any screening.

One of the studies, which was based in Europe, found that, yes, men who had undergone prostate cancer screening did have lowered rates of death from prostate cancer (up to 20% lower).

However, it was also found that, in order to prevent one death from prostate cancer, approximately 1400 men would have to undergo prostate cancer screening. Furthermore, a certain percentage of men who undergo screening eventually proceed to more invasive testing such as prostate biopsy, which has its own set of risks and complications.

So far, most of the editorials and opinions in the American media have focused on the fact that a large number of men need to be screened and tested for prostate cancer in order to save even one life from prostate cancer. This is true, but the results of these studies really don't change what doctors have been saying all along - that the PSA test is imperfect, but still the best that is available (when used with regular digital rectal exams) for early detection of prostate cancer.

In my opinion, the PSA test should be interpreted with a more nuanced approach. Other indicators such as the PSA velocity, the PSA density, and the percent-free PSA have been shown to be useful for determining which elevated PSA levels are the most likely to represent prostate cancer that is the most dangerous.

Abandoning the PSA test because of its imperfections is unwise and very unlikely to happen until a proven superior test is developed.

Here are links to the two studies that were recently published in the NEJM.

The American trial and the European trial.

Friday 20 March 2009

Choosing a Treatment for Prostate Cancer

Once a man is diagnosed with prostate cancer, he faces a myriad of treatment options, ranging from prostate removal to radioactive implants to no treatment at all. Unfortunately, science isn’t much help.

A recent report from the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality concluded that no one treatment is superior.

As part of our regular health video series, The New York Times spoke with 59-year-old Mark Spindel about his treatment choice: surgical removal of the prostate. Click on the video link to hear his story.

Tuesday 17 March 2009

MANAGEMENT OF RADIATION PROCTITIS

Radiotherapy is frequently used in the treatment of cancer inc ombination with other treatments.

In men the two most prevalent cancers requiring radiotherapy are cancer of the bladder and cancer of the prostate.
“As after radical surgery where complications may occur, radiotherapy is not without problems,” reports Dr Chapuis.

Rectal bleeding is a known treatment complication of prostate cancer. Three different terms are used to describe this condition. They are:

•Actinic proctitis

•Radiation proctitis

•Chronic radiation-induced rectal bleeding (CRRB).


Rectal bleeding may complicate treatment in 5 to 10 percent of patients. Rectal bleeding is caused by radiation thickening of the walls of small arteries supplying the rectum, and so by narrowing them to restrict the blood flow to the rectal wall.

To compensate for this, new thread-like capillaries grow in profusion very close to the internal surface of the rectum. It is the fragility of these capillaries that causes the bleeding. As this does not involve true inflammation, “proctitis” is an inappropriate term.

Professor Chapuis prefers the third description: chronic radiation-induced rectal bleeding(CRRB). The rectal bleeding may not start until some 12 months to three years after treatment. Because bleeding is a known side effectof radiation therapy for prostate cancer, and rarely may be life-threatening, patients should be informed of this risk and consent to such treatment.

Rectal symptoms can fall into two broad categories which are partly dose-related: acute and chronic.


Acute:

Symptoms include tenesmus (pain on passing stools), diarrhoea, urgency of defaecation and bleeding.

Chronic:

Symptoms include stricture (narrowing or restriction), fistula (abnormal passage), CRRB, varying degrees of incontinence, loss of compliance and storage capacity of the rectum.


Clinical features of CRRB include:

• It is classed as Grade III on a scale of seriousness from I to IV, ie quite serious. Around 50 percent of cases are late onset (ie, starting later than one year after treatment).

• From a situation with the patient not experiencing any problems, it may become chronic with progressively increasing bleeding resulting in iron deficiency anaemia which may require daily dosage of iron tablets.

• Fifteen to 20 years ago it quite often led to transfusion-dependent anaemia, necessitating frequent blood transfusions, but this is now very unusual as a result of much improved radiotherapy techniques. It is important for prostate cancer patients to recognise that some degree of “collateral” damage will inevitably occur to the rectum due to the radiation treatment.

Late development of bleeding will be experienced by a small proportion of these patients, but this is nowhere near as common or severe a problem as in the past. A critical decision is whether the benefit of the radiation treatment of the cancer outweighs the risks of rectal bleeding or other complications as a result of that treatment.


The factors which affect the risk include:

• The total dose of the radiation

• The fractionation of the dose ie, how it is delivered

• The build of patient, as obese people are more susceptible

• Diabetes

• Hypertension

• Previous abdominal or pelvic surgery (adhesions)

• Chronic diverticular disease of the proximal bowel

• Bleeding may be exacerbated if taking drugs such as Asprin,Warfarin or Plavix Possibly because of their genetic make-up, some men are inherently more sensitive to radiation.


Quality of life issues that may influence the decision whether to opt for/out of radiotherapy include:

• The alarm caused by unexpected bleeds

• The late onset (leading to several years of anxiety about whether bleeding will occur)

• The absence of identifiable risk factors in many cases pre-venting prediction of whether any particular patient will be affected

• Whether the patient has other conditions, such as diabetesor hypertension.


Additional issues include:

• The unpredictable nature of the bleeding which is socially inconvenient and can be acutely embarrassing

• The resulting anaemia is debilitating

• Poor response to treatment

• Simple treatments often pre-scribed (like steroid supposito-ries or enemas) are usually of little benefit

• The condition can last a longtime

• There is a (small) possibility of it progressing to Transfusion Dependent Anaemia.


Patients with CRRB should be thoroughly assessed, including their history and a physical examination, a blood test including a full blood count, iron studies and coagulation profile. Then a safe and thorough examination by colonoscopy of the large bowel enables the severity of the condition to be determined and identification of other sources of bleeding.

A cystoscopy and/or special small bowel X-ray are sometimes appropriate. Sometimes anorectal manometry is needed to test the strength of the sphincter muscle prior to treatment.

The patient may be asked to keep a record of bleeds by marking a calendar as treatment progresses. There are several options for treatment, which will be influenced by the location of the source of bleeding and the extent of the condition.


Minimally invasive therapy includes:

• Electrocautery

• Argon Plasma Coagulation Therapy (APC)

• Endoscopic laser

• Formalin (formaldehyde) dressings applied under a general anaesthetic

• Hyperbaric oxygenation with multiple treatment episodes required.


In the case of APC or endoscopic laser, each potential bleeding pointneeds to be separately treated. The procedure may require several visits, spaced a few weeks apart, to allow the lining of the rectum to recover. The procedure may be undertaken under conscious sedation or general anaesthesia.

The use of formalin began in the1960s. It was found that the formalin destroyed the superficial lining (which then separated off) thus causing the bleeding to stop and allowing the new lining to regrow without blood vessels.

However, the appropriate concentration for the formalin was uncertain, and the approach was abandoned until more recently, when a particular low concentration has been found to be both effective and safe.

A blood count is taken before and after treatment. The patient undergoes a general anaesthetic and is prepared by applying plastic skin dressings applied to the skin surrounding the anal passage. A speculum is inserted and dressings containing formalin are packed into the rectum through it and left for five to ten minutes before being removed. This is repeated until bleeding ceases.


Up to 20% of patients treated with the formalin method experience complications, like:

• Mucus incontinence either from treatment or from the initial radiotherapy

• Some patients may need to wear a pad

• Acute prostatitis (very rare)

• Narrowing of the rectum (veryrare)

• Ischaemic ulcer.

This is pre-vented by taking care to cover exterior of anus with a plastic skin during treatment. Use of either the laser or the formalin method, or both together, results in 75 – 80% success.

However, treatment and follow up may be necessary for up to 12 months. For otherwise intractable cases, several surgical options exist.

Our sincere thanks to Dr Chapuis for his carefully structured presentation and clear explanations, and for fielding wide ranging questions. Summarised by Mark Tweed-dale and Pam Sandoe. Edited and approved by Dr Chapuis; 'The Management of Radiation Proctitis'.

Monday 16 March 2009

Radiation Proctitis

Radiation Proctitis

The following video depicts one method of treatment used for Radiation Proctitis. Though somewhat graphic, these images show the presence of lesions and how APC (Argon Plasma Coagulation) is used to treat them.






Video courtesy of the Dave Project

Saturday 14 March 2009

Coping With Cancer

New York Times editor and blogger Dana Jennings opens up about his struggles with an aggressive form of prostate cancer, why he says calling prostate cancer “the good cancer” is a misnomer, and more.

If you’re a fan of Dana’s column, you’ll enjoy the interview with WNYC talk show host Leonard Lopate.






To read previous columns by Dana, click on Prostate Cancer Journal.


Friday 13 March 2009

ASCO meeting report: Prostate Cancer deaths Lower in Users of Cholesterol lowering drugs

This article from American Society of Clinical oncology inMedpage Today reports outcome from a study exploring benefits of cholesterol-lowering drugs or statins on prostate cancer survival.


ORLANDO, Feb. 27 -- Prostate cancer mortality risk declined by 50% in men taking statins for reasons unrelated to cancer, data from a case-control study showed.

The mortality benefit increased to almost two-thirds after adjustment for potential confounding factors, according to Stephen Marcella, M.D., of the University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey School of Public Health in Piscataway. He reported his findings at the Genitourinary Cancers Symposium here.

The benefit was greatest in men taking high-potency statins, such as atorvastatin (Lipitor) and rosuvastatin (Crestor), as well as lipophilic statins, such as atorvastatin and fluvastatin (Lescol).

"The strongest feature of this study is that it looks at mortality," said Dr. Marcella. "A few other studies have looked at advanced prostate cancer, and they are accumulating. We actually looked at prostate cancer death, and we verified in every case that the patient died of prostate cancer."

Several recent studies have suggested that statin exposure decreases the risk of advanced or metastatic prostate cancer. Evidence also has linked prostate cancer to obesity and metabolic syndrome, two indications for statin use.

Any protective effect of statins in prostate cancer might be underestimated without adjustment for potential confounding by obesity, metabolic syndrome, and other factors, said Dr. Marcella.

To examine the effect of incidental statin use on prostate cancer mortality, investigators examined data from the New Jersey Cancer Registry. Patients who died of prostate cancer during 1999 to 2001 were identified and compared with matched controls randomly selected from a Medicare database.

The study involved 380 cases and 380 controls, all of whom were married during the period reviewed, a requirement to obtain access to deceased patients' medical records. Patients were matched with respect to age, race, education, and comorbid conditions. The mean age of the entire study population was about 66 years.

Investigators abstracted data on height and weight, medication use, and history of serious or chronic illness. Patients and controls were compared with respect to statin exposure from 1989 forward. Prespecified analyses included effects of high- versus low-potency statins and hydrophilic versus lipophilic statins.

The cases and controls differed substantially with respect to medication use. Significantly more patients in the control group had a history of statin use (71.2% versus 16.6%, P0.0001), whereas significantly more prostate cancer patients had received antihypertensive therapy (75.7% versus 53%, P0.0001) and other types of cardiac medications (41.7% versus 28%, P0.0001).

Unadjusted results revealed a prostate cancer mortality odds ratio of 0.49 for statin users versus nonusers (P 0.0001). Adjustment for demographic and clinical variables, including use of antihypertensive medications, further reduced the odds ratio to 0.37 (P0.0001).

Analysis by type of statin showed the following prostate cancer mortality odds ratios:

Hydrophilic statin, 0.41, P=0.02

Lipophilic statin, 0.35, P=0.0002

High-potency statin, 0.27, P0.0001

Low-potency statin, 0.69, P=0.32

By Charles Bankhead, Staff Writer, MedPage Today

Published: February 27, 2009


See: MedPage Today


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We hope you visit http://www.medpagetoday.com every day for the latest in medical news

Thursday 12 March 2009

ASCO: Estrogen Patch Looks Promising as Androgen Deprivation Therapy

This presentation from American Society of Clinical Oncology in Medpage Today reports outcome from a study exploring ability of estrogen therapy to replace androgen lowering treatments without some of the side effects.


ORLANDO, March 3 -- Estrogen could make a comeback as hormonal therapy for advanced prostate cancer if interim results from an ongoing clinical trial hold up in further testing.

Transdermal estrogen drove down testosterone and PSA levels to a similar extent as an LHRH analog, Ruth E. Langley, M.D., of the Medical Research Council in London, reported at the Genitourinary Cancers Symposium.

No worrisome adverse events have occurred with the estrogen patches, which could help preserve bone mineral density, unlike conventional androgen deprivation therapy.

"These data demonstrate that estrogen patches produce a similar fall in testosterone to LHRH analogs and concomitant falls in PSA in patients with metastatic and locally advanced prostate cancer," said Dr. Langley. "The patches have been generally well tolerated."

Cardiovascular safety data have yet to be released, pending accrual of the 200-patient total for the study.

Nonetheless, on the basis of the results, the data monitoring committee recommended that investigators "focus their plans towards developing a larger, phase III trial," said Dr. Langley.

Oral estrogen won support as hormonal therapy for prostate cancer in the 1960s. However, the treatment fell out of favor because it was associated with increased cardiovascular morbidity, said Dr. Langley.

"The [cardiovascular] toxicity has been attributed to first-pass hepatic metabolism, which affects lipids and coagulation proteins," she said. "Since transcutaneous administration of estrogen avoids the enterohepatic circulation, it should not be associated with the same high levels of cardiovascular toxicity."

In a preliminary trial involving 20 patients with prostate cancer, estrogen patches lowered testosterone to castrate levels and caused no cardiovascular events, aside from one case of edema.

On the basis of those results, investigators organized a multicenter, randomized study that included 172 patients as of mid-February.

The trial involved patients with newly diagnosed T3/4 prostate cancer or with cancer in PSA relapse following definitive surgery or radiation therapy. Castrate-level testosterone was defined as 50 ng/dL.

The patients were randomized 1:2 to an LHRH analog or to transdermal patches that released 100 µg of estradiol per hour. After a planned review of data, investigators increased the patch dosage.

As a result, the first 33 patients randomized to transdermal patches received three patches, which were changed twice weekly. The remaining patients assigned to the estrogen group received four patches that were changed twice weekly.

Estradiol, testosterone, and PSA levels were measured at four weeks and three months and then every six months. In addition, investigators measured PSA levels at nine, 15, and 21 months.

At week four, 20 of 33 patients (60.6%) in the LHRH analog group had castrate levels of testosterone, as did 20 of 30 (66.6%) who received three estradiol patches, and 30 of 33 (90.9%)who received four patches.

Four LHRH analog patients had testosterone levels between 50 and 100 ng/dL, compared with five in the three-patch group and three in the four-patch group.

By week 12, 26 of 28 evaluable patients (92.8%) assigned to the LHRH analog had castrate levels of testosterone, and none had levels between 50 and 100 ng/dL.

Among patients treated with three estradiol patches, 21 of 29 (72.4%) had castrate levels of testosterone and six had levels of 50 to 100 ng/dL.

In the four-patch group, 27 of 31 patients (87%) had castrate testosterone levels and the other four had levels of 50 to 100 ng/dL.

At six months, the median testosterone levels were 14.3 ng/dL in the LHRH analog group, 28.6 ng/dL in the three-patch group, and 22.9 ng/dL in the four-patch group.

Median PSA values were 0.9 ng/mL, 3.2 ng/mL, and 1.3 ng/mL, respectively.

Dr. Langley and her coinvestigators reported no disclosures.


By Charles Bankhead, Staff Writer, MedPage Today

Published: March 03, 2009

Primary source: ASCO: Genitourinary Cancers Symposium

Source reference:

Langley RE, et al "PATCH, a randomized phase II trial of estrogen patches versus LHRH as first-line hormonal therapy for prostate cancer: planned interim analysis results" ASCO: GU 2009; Abstract 173.


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http://www.medpagetoday.com/MeetingCoverage/ASCOGU/13105?utm_source=WC&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=Meeting_Roundup_ASCO%2520GU


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Saturday 7 March 2009

New national prostate cancer research centre announced

The Treasurer Wayne Swan yesterday announced the second of two major prostate cancer research centres in Brisbane.. with a $7.5 million grant. The Centre will be hosted by QUT:

“The Prostate Cancer Research Centres will develop improved diagnostic and screening tools as well as new treatments for prostate cancer.

In November I announced that one of the Prostate Cancer Research Centres will be located at the Epworth Hospital in Richmond, Victoria. Today I am delighted to announce the second Prostate Cancer Research Centre will be based in Brisbane.

The Centre based at the Princess Alexandra Hospital and hosted by QUT will:

· Identify new ways to detect the presence of prostate cancer and reliably differentiate between slow growing and aggressive forms of the disease;

· Develop new drug therapies that target the molecular mechanisms that allow prostate cancers to resist current drug treatments; and

· Identify accurate markers that will assist in predicting treatment response”


The following is from QUT’s press release: “. The centre will initially be housed at PAH and ultimately in the $300 million Translational Research Institute which is due to open in Brisbane in 2012. Clinical trials will be performed at the centre, which will also work in partnership with the Prostate Cancer Foundation of Canada.

QUT Vice-Chancellor Professor Peter Coaldrake said the centre would undoubtedly attract national and international funding, as well as strong industry support.

"This is an exciting project that will assemble a large multi-disciplinary research team, and we thank the Commonwealth Government for its commitment," Professor Coaldrake said. "We also acknowledge the State Government's ongoing support of research in this field."

The new centre will help to coordinate effective national prostate cancer research and establish a major hub for discovery-based research and trials. "The clinical trials unit will bring together urologists, medical oncologists, radiation oncologists and endocrinologists and will attract national and international clinical trials." Professor Coaldrake acknowledged the work of QUT researchers Professor Colleen Nelson and Professor Judith Clements.

"Professor Nelson's global reputation for prostate cancer research was a key factor in attracting the centre to Brisbane," Professor Coaldrake said. "That alliance has already connected nearly 200 prostate cancer scientists and clinicians across Australia and Canada and we look forward to playing an even greater role in facilitating and accelerating the development of new therapeutics for prostate cancer." "And for the best part of 10 years Professor Clements has led QUT's research in the field of hormone dependent cancers."

Professor Nelson, who will co-direct the centre along with Professor Clements and Professor David Nicol (PAH) said the research they would conduct wouldn't know any bounds. "We are committed to working with many world leaders in this field, locally, nationally and internationally, to come up with global solutions," Professor Nelson said. Work will start immediately on establishing the centre.


13 January 2009

Treasurer Announces Funding for Prostate Cancer Research Centre

Prostate now most common cancer in NSW

Minister Assisting the Minister for Health (Cancer) Jodi McKay today launched a new report revealing that cancer death rates continue to fall in NSW.

“Cancer death rates have fallen by 14 per cent in men and 8 per cent in women over the pastdecade, according to the latest data in the Cancer Institute NSW’s annual Cancer Incidence and Mortality (CIM) report,” Ms McKay said.

“The CIM report reveals the number of people diagnosed with cancer has increased, and that some of the State’s most common – lung and bowel cancer, and melanoma - may be avoided in the future through better lifestyle choices.

“The Cancer Institute advises there are several reasons for the increased incidence of cancer such as our aging population, improvements in cancer detection, and the ongoing impact of tobacco, obesity and other lifestyle factors.

“The message is clear. You can reduce your risk of getting cancer by doing simple things such as not smoking, eating healthy food, limiting alcohol consumption, exercising, protecting yourself from the sun and having regular cancer screening.”

Ms McKay said prostate cancer was now the most common cancer in NSW and accounted for 20 per cent of all cancers.

“Since prostate specific antigen (PSA) testing began in 1990, death rates from prostate cancer have fallen 20 per cent,” Ms McKay said.

Prostate cancer cases are predicted to increase 52.5% in the next 10 years, followed by breast cancer (39%), colorectal cancer (28%), melanoma (25%) and lung cancer (11%).



Daily Telegraph, 4/2/09, p15

Hot of the Press

Prostate Cancer Urine Test

An experimental urine test has reportedly been identified “at least as good” as the prostate-specific antigen (PSA) test for predicting aggressive prostate cancer in men according to new study published in a British Journal Nature on February 12 2009.

The urine test assesses levels of prostate cancer specific metabolites which could eventually be added to PSA and other tools for monitoring prostate cancer progression according to the researchers.

Metabolites were studied in the investigation from samples of tissue, blood, or urine associated with benign prostate tissue, early-stage prostate cancer, and metastatic prostate cancer.

Investigations showed elevated concentration levels of the amino acid sarcosine, appearing to be the strongest indicator of advanced disease. Levels of sarcosine were elevated in 79% of the metastatic prostate cancer samples and in 42% of the locally advanced cancer samples. Sarcosine was not found in the cancer free samples.

The investigation however, had a small study sample, and requires further validation and development of the scientific approach of analysing metabolites as prostate cancer biomarkers.

For more on this research: Metabolomic profiles delineate potential role for sarcosine in prostate cancer progression