Al B Barqawi1, Emma Huebner2, Kevin Krughoff2, Colin I O'Donnell2. 1. Division of Urology, Department of Surgery, University of Colorado Denver School of Medicine, Aurora, CO. Electronic address: al.barqawi@ucdenver.edu. 2. Division of Urology, Department of Surgery, University of Colorado Denver School of Medicine, Aurora, CO.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To determine the rate of complications and change in International Prostate Symptom Score and Sexual Health Inventory for Men scores following cryotherapy treatment of low- and intermediate-risk prostate cancer. The secondary end points were the change in prostate-specific antigen post cryotherapy and biopsy-proven recurrence. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Enrollment occurred from 2007 to 2015 to assess long-term complications of cryotherapy. A prostate biopsy was performed at 1 year or in the event of biochemical failure. Subjects were staged and graded by standard 12- to 14-core transrectal ultrasound (TRUS) biopsy. A subset of subjects underwent additional 3-dimensional mapping biopsy if the cancer was suspected to be downgraded. Analyses of functional outcomes were stratified into focal and nonfocal treatments. RESULTS: The study consisted of 393 men with low- and intermediate-risk prostate cancer, aged 44-89 years. Patient IPSS scores improved significantly in the nonfocal treatment strata at all time points and after 1 year in the focal strata with a median drop at 1 year of 4 points (P <.001). No significant difference was detected for a change in preprocedural SHIM score in either treatment strata after 2 years (P >.7). Eighty-two patients (20.9%) had a rise in prostate-specific antigen resulting in biochemical failure. Seventy patients had detected recurrence for an overall recurrence rate of 20.4% in 343 patients. A total of 109 patients (27.7%) reported urinary retention and urgency post cryotherapy, with 15.3% requiring catheterization for up to 3 weeks. Thirty-seven patients (9.4%) experienced urethral meatal stricture, and 36 patients (9.2%) reported unresolved new-onset erectile dysfunction. CONCLUSION: Complication rates, most significantly erectile dysfunction, are decreased in this study compared with those previously reported in the literature for cryotherapy for prostate cancer.
OBJECTIVE: To determine the rate of complications and change in International Prostate Symptom Score and Sexual Health Inventory for Men scores following cryotherapy treatment of low- and intermediate-risk prostate cancer. The secondary end points were the change in prostate-specific antigen post cryotherapy and biopsy-proven recurrence. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Enrollment occurred from 2007 to 2015 to assess long-term complications of cryotherapy. A prostate biopsy was performed at 1 year or in the event of biochemical failure. Subjects were staged and graded by standard 12- to 14-core transrectal ultrasound (TRUS) biopsy. A subset of subjects underwent additional 3-dimensional mapping biopsy if the cancer was suspected to be downgraded. Analyses of functional outcomes were stratified into focal and nonfocal treatments. RESULTS: The study consisted of 393 men with low- and intermediate-risk prostate cancer, aged 44-89 years. Patient IPSS scores improved significantly in the nonfocal treatment strata at all time points and after 1 year in the focal strata with a median drop at 1 year of 4 points (P <.001). No significant difference was detected for a change in preprocedural SHIM score in either treatment strata after 2 years (P >.7). Eighty-two patients (20.9%) had a rise in prostate-specific antigen resulting in biochemical failure. Seventy patients had detected recurrence for an overall recurrence rate of 20.4% in 343 patients. A total of 109 patients (27.7%) reported urinary retention and urgency post cryotherapy, with 15.3% requiring catheterization for up to 3 weeks. Thirty-seven patients (9.4%) experienced urethral meatal stricture, and 36 patients (9.2%) reported unresolved new-onset erectile dysfunction. CONCLUSION: Complication rates, most significantly erectile dysfunction, are decreased in this study compared with those previously reported in the literature for cryotherapy for prostate cancer.
Authors: Steve R Zhou; Alan M Priester; Rajiv Jayadevan; David C Johnson; Jason J Yang; Jorge Ballon; Shyam Natarajan; Leonard S Marks Journal: BJU Int Date: 2019-11-25 Impact factor: 5.969
Authors: Łukasz Nyk; Wojciech Michalak; Stanisław Szempliński; Rafał Woźniak; Bartłomiej Zagożdżon; Wojciech Krajewski; Piotr Kryst; Hubert Kamecki; Sławomir Poletajew Journal: J Pers Med Date: 2022-02-09