
Vol. 28, No. 6-7, 2005
Free Abstract
Article (PDF 109 KB)
Review Article · Übersichtsarbeit
Prostate Cancer Relapse after Therapy with Curative Intention: A Diagnostic and Therapeutic Dilemma
E. Gronau; M. Goppelt; R. Harzmann; D. Weckermann
Urologische Klinik, Klinikum Augsburg, Germany
Onkologie 2005;28:361-366
(DOI: 10.1159/000085661)
Summary
Prostate cancer is the most common malignant disease
and second in causes of cancer death among men in
Western Europe and North America. Despite improved
surgical and irradiation techniques tumor relapse after
curatively intended therapy is not uncommon. Due to the
difficulty in discriminating local and systemic progression,
it is often difficult to decide what this means for the
patient and what kind of second-line treatment has to be
given. Modern imaging techniques (MRI with endorectal
coil, Choline-PET-CT, ProstaScint®-Scan) are used for diagnosis
of prostate cancer relapse. Nevertheless, early
detection of local tumor relapse and likewise the detection
of disseminated tumor cells often fails. To differentiate
between local and systemic progression, prognostic
factors of the primary tumor (grading, surgical margins,
infiltration of the seminal vesicles, lymph node metastases)
and PSA kinetics are used. The time from initial
treatment to biochemical relapse and PSA doubling time
are of highest prognostic relevance. Local progression
allows second-line local treatment with potentially curative
results (local irradiation after radical prostatectomy,
salvage-surgery / cryotherapy / HIFU after irradiation),
while in the case of systemic progress a palliative systemic
therapy (hormonal treatment, chemotherapy, bisphosphonates)
is indicated. Before deciding on the most
appropriate therapy, prognostic factors and the patient’s
individual situation (co-morbidity, life expectancy, individual
wishes) should be taken into account.
Copyright © 2005 S. Karger GmbH, Freiburg
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