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Role of salvage lymph node dissection in patients previously treated for prostate cancer: systematic review

Journal

INTERNATIONAL BRAZ J UROL
Volume 47, Issue 3, Pages 484-494

Publisher

BRAZILIAN SOC UROL
DOI: 10.1590/S1677-5538.IBJU.2020.0051

Keywords

Prostate cancer; familial [Supplementary Concept]; Lymph Nodes; Systematic Reviews as Topic

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Salvage lymphadenectomy is a promising approach for lymph node metastases in prostate cancer patients, showing potential to delay systemic therapy despite not significantly increasing biochemical recurrence rates in all studies. However, long-term impact on overall survival and quality of life, as well as optimal case selection strategies, still need further investigation.
Prostate cancer is the most common invasive cancer in men. Radical prostatectomy (RP) is a definitive treatment option, but biochemical recurrence can reach 40 %. Salvage lymphadenectomy is a relatively recent approach to oligometasis and has been rapidly diffused primarily due to improvement in imaging diagnosis and results showing possibly promising therapy. A systematic literature review was performed in March 2020, according to the PRISMA statement. We excluded studies with patients with suspicion or confirmation of visceral and / or bone metastases. A total of 27 articles were included in the study. All studies evaluated were single arm, and there were no randomized studies in the literature. A total of 1,714 patients received salvage lymphadenectomy after previous treatment for localized prostate cancer. RP was the most used initial therapeutic approach, and relapses were based on PET / CT diagnosis, with Coline- 11C being the most widely used radiopharmaceutical. Biochemical response rates ranged from 0% to 80%. The 5 years - Free Survival Biochemical recurrence was analyzed in 16 studies with rates of 0% up to 56.1%. The articles do not present high levels of evidence to draw strong conclusions. However, even if significant rates of biochemical recurrence are not evident in all studies, therapy directed to lymph node metastases may present good oncological results and postpone the onset of systemic therapy. The long-term impact in overall survival and quality of life, as well as the best strategies for case selection remains to be determined.

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