Literature DB >> 19095126

Prostate cancer: epidemiology and health-related quality of life.

David F Penson1, Michel Rossignol, A Oliver Sartor, Peter T Scardino, Lucien L Abenhaim.   

Abstract

The dramatic increase during the past decade in prostate-specific antigen (PSA) testing and prostate biopsies has resulted in the detection of large numbers of small lesions, an increase in the incidence of prostate cancer, and an increasing incidence-to-mortality ratio. Currently, the risk of being diagnosed with prostate cancer is increasingly greater than the risk of dying of it. The currently available treatments for prostate cancer are not well suited to treating small or indolent tumors. Radical treatment, whether surgery or radiotherapy, can eradicate cancer effectively, but these techniques, as well as hormonal manipulations, can have adverse effects on patients' health and quality of life. Watchful waiting, or "active surveillance," has the advantage of avoiding the deleterious effects on quality of life, but it confronts patients with the emotional burden of living with an untreated cancer that could progress and metastasize. For active surveillance, no established, objective criteria are available for progression that would signal the optimal time for therapeutic intervention. PSA levels in patients with low-risk, small-volume cancers are more indicative of the size of the benign prostate or the presence of inflammation than of changes in the volume or growth of the cancer, and PSA levels inherently fluctuate, creating a low signal-to-noise ratio until the cancer is very large. Little risk exists in waiting to confirm a sustained increase in the PSA level before proceeding with a diagnostic biopsy. This policy would decrease the number of unnecessary biopsies, but still diagnose men within a safe timeframe. In studies controlled for age and comorbidity, the survival rate for patients with low-risk prostate cancer mirrors that expected in the general population. This holds true across cohorts of patients, whatever the treatment used. Because no strong medical or scientific evidence supports any particular ablative technique for low-risk prostate cancer, no standard of care has been universally accepted. Therefore, practice patterns are heterogeneous and depend more on the availability of treatments than on the features of the disease itself.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2008        PMID: 19095126     DOI: 10.1016/j.urology.2008.10.006

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Urology        ISSN: 0090-4295            Impact factor:   2.649


  8 in total

1.  Historical prostate cancer screening and treatment outcomes from a single institution.

Authors:  Deanna S Cross; Mark Ritter; Douglas J Reding
Journal:  Clin Med Res       Date:  2012-04-25

2.  A novel predictor of clinical progression in patients on active surveillance for prostate cancer.

Authors:  Guan Hee Tan; Antonio Finelli; Ardalan Ahmad; Marian S Wettstein; Thenappan Chandrasekar; Alexandre R Zlotta; Neil E Fleshner; Robert J Hamilton; Girish S Kulkarni; Khaled Ajib; Gregory Nason; Nathan Perlis
Journal:  Can Urol Assoc J       Date:  2019-08-31       Impact factor: 1.862

3.  Contrast enhanced transrectal ultrasound for the detection of prostate cancer: a randomized, double-blind trial of dutasteride pretreatment.

Authors:  Ethan J Halpern; Leonard G Gomella; Flemming Forsberg; Peter A McCue; Edouard J Trabulsi
Journal:  J Urol       Date:  2012-09-19       Impact factor: 7.450

4.  Continence rate and oncological feasibility after total transurethral resection of the prostate as an alternative therapy for the treatment of prostate cancer: a pilot study.

Authors:  Hee Jong Jeong; Dong Deuk Kwon
Journal:  Int Neurourol J       Date:  2011-12-31       Impact factor: 2.835

5.  Clinical intervals and diagnostic characteristics in a cohort of prostate cancer patients in Spain: a multicentre observational study.

Authors:  Xavier Bonfill; María José Martinez-Zapata; Robin W M Vernooij; María José Sánchez; María Morales Suárez-Varela; Javier de la Cruz; José Ignacio Emparanza; Montserrat Ferrer; José Ignacio Pijoán; Juan M Ramos-Goñi; Joan Palou; Stefanie Schmidt; Víctor Abraira; Javier Zamora
Journal:  BMC Urol       Date:  2015-07-02       Impact factor: 2.264

6.  Patients' perceptions of the negative effects following different prostate cancer treatments and the impact on psychological well-being: a nationwide survey.

Authors:  Ulla-Sisko Lehto; Heli Tenhola; Kimmo Taari; Arpo Aromaa
Journal:  Br J Cancer       Date:  2017-02-21       Impact factor: 7.640

7.  Early quality-of-life and psychological predictors of disease-free time and survival in localized prostate cancer.

Authors:  Ulla-Sisko Lehto; Markku Ojanen; Anna Väkevä; Tadeusz Dyba; Arpo Aromaa; Pirkko Kellokumpu-Lehtinen
Journal:  Qual Life Res       Date:  2018-12-03       Impact factor: 4.147

8.  What matters to patients and clinicians when discussing the impact of cancer medicines on health-related quality of life? Consensus-based mixed methods approach in prostate cancer.

Authors:  Emma Dunlop; Aimee Ferguson; Tanja Mueller; Kelly Baillie; Julie Clarke; Jennifer Laskey; Amanj Kurdi; Olivia Wu; Rob Jones; Hilary Glen; Marion Bennie
Journal:  Support Care Cancer       Date:  2021-12-08       Impact factor: 3.359

  8 in total

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.