4.5 Article

Optimal treatment of locally advanced prostate cancer

Journal

WORLD JOURNAL OF UROLOGY
Volume 25, Issue 2, Pages 169-176

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00345-007-0158-7

Keywords

prostate cancer; locally advanced; radical prostatectomy; radiotherapy; hormonal therapy; conservative therapy

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The treatment of clinically locally advanced prostate cancer (cT3-4) is subject to controversies. Patients with lymph node metastases as well as patients with overstaged localized and thus curable disease fall into this category. Radical prostatectomy, external beam radiotherapy and early or deferred hormonal therapy are possible treatment options. Multimodal treatment (i.e., a combination of these options) is frequently used. After radical prostatectomy, Gleason score-adjusted disease-specific survival does not differ meaningfully between the tumor stages pT2 and pT3-4. In the case of lymph node metastases after radical prostatectomy, but not in node-negative disease, adjuvant hormonal treatment seems to improve survival. Adjuvant radiotherapy may improve biochemical and local control in locally advanced prostate cancer, a survival benefit has, however, not yet been proven. External beam radiotherapy alone provides unfavourable survival rates in locally advanced prostate cancer. Adjuvant hormonal treatment may improve outcome in this setting. When no curative treatment is chosen, early hormonal treatment seems to provide modest benefit compared with deferred therapy.

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