Only few patients with PSA relapse after radical treatment will show clinically detectable disease. Although the natural history of recurrent prostate cancer is often one of the slowly progressing ...diseases, in some men it can be rapid and may need a salvage treatment. In general, time to PSA relapse, PSA velocity and PSA doubling time are useful in patient assesment. In patients with PCa disease relapse after primary therapy, salvage treatment for a local recurrence should only be offered to patients with little risk of already having metastases. In these patients a systemic imaging negative for metastases is mandatory, a positive biopsy is not always necessary before radiotherapy, but is mandatory before salvage prostatectomy. In patients with a high risk of distant metastases and suitable for systemic salvage therapy, a positive lesion must be obviously visualized with one of the currently available imaging techniques. Transrectal ultrasound has low accuracy in the detection of the recurrence. Multiparametric Magnetic Resonance Imaging may have a role in the early phase of PSA relapse. Conventional imaging, such as bone scan and CT, are not suggested in the initial phase of BCR. Today, it has been reported that PET/CT allows changing the therapeutic strategy (from palliative to curative treatment and vice-versa) in about 20% of cases. In recent years, the new radiotracer 18F-FACBC has been proposed as a possible alternative radiopharmaceutical to detect PCa relapse. The aim of the present paper is to evaluate the management of patients with BCR after radical treatment of PCa from the urologist point of view.
Erectile dysfunction (ED) represents one of the most common long-term side effects in prostate cancer (PCa) patients treated with bilateral nerve-sparing radical prostatectomy (BNSRP). The aim of our ...study was to assess the influence of non-surgically related causes of ED in patients treated with BNSRP.
Overall, 716 patients treated with BNSRP were retrospectively identified. All patients had complete data on erectile function (EF) assessed by the Index of Erectile Function-EF domain (IIEF-EF) and depressive status assessed by the Center for Epidemiologic Studies-Depression (CES-D) questionnaire. EF recovery was defined as an IIEF-EF of ⩾22. Kaplan-Meier analyses assessed the impact of preoperative IIEF-EF, depression and adjuvant radiotherapy (aRT) on the time to EF recovery. Multivariable Cox regression models were used to test the impact of aRT on EF recovery after accounting for depression and baseline IIEF-EF.
Median follow-up was 48 months. Patients with a preoperative IIEF-EF of ⩾22 had substantially higher EF recovery rates compared with those with a lower IIEF-EF (P<0.001). Patients with a CES-D of <16 had significantly higher EF recovery rates compared to those with depression (60.8 vs 49.2%; P=0.03). Patients receiving postoperative aRT had lower rates of EF compared with their counterparts left untreated after surgery (40.7 vs 59.8%; P<0.001). These results were confirmed in multivariable analyses, where preoperative IIEF-EF (P<0.001), depression (P=0.04) and aRT (P=0.03) were confirmed as significant predictors of EF recovery.
Preoperative functional status and depression should be considered when counseling PCa patients regarding the long-term side effects of BNSRP. Moreover, the administration of aRT has a detrimental effect on the probability of recovering EF after BNSRP. This should be taken into account when balancing the potential benefits and side effects of multimodal therapies in PCa patients.
Abstract One of the main problems in transplant surgery is the preservation of the organ during the cold ischemic time. The interrupted blood supply triggers a cascade of biological modifications ...resulting in cell death, which predisposes to discharge of a large quantity of toxic metabolites at the moment of organ reperfusion. Many approaches have been studied to prevent the toxic processes. Immediately after procurement, kidneys are flushed with these solutions. Two main: techniques of organ preservation are cold static storage and hypothermic machine perfusion (HMP). Based on age and comorbidities, individuals can be generally divided into 2 groups: ideal and marginal donors. Characteristics of organs from marginal donors are associated with an increased rate of delayed graft function and primary graft nonfunction (PNF), which reduce transplant survival and increase the acute rejection risk. In the last 20 years, the United Network of Organ Sharing has reported a 170% increase in deceased donors older than 50 years of age. Techniques of perfusion have been demonstrated to play a pivotal role in graft function after transplantation. Some studies suggest that HMP may improve outcomes after transplantation.
Abstract Objective To offer a comprehensive account of surgical outcomes on a defined series of patients treated with radical retropubic prostatectomy (RRP) for prostate cancer in a single European ...Center after 5-year minimum follow-up according to the Survival, Continence and Potency (SCP) system. Material and methods We evaluated our Institutional database of patients who underwent RRP from November 1995 to September 2008. Oncological and functional outcomes were reported according to the recently proposed SCP system. Results The 5- and 10-year biochemical recurrence-free survival rates were 80.1% and 55.8%, respectively. At the end of follow-up, 611 (78.5%) patients were fully continent (C0), 107 (13.8%) used 1 pad for security (C1) and 60 (7.7%) patients were incontinent (C2). Of the 112 patients who underwent nerve-sparing RRP, 22 (19.6%) were fully potent without aids (P0), 13 (11.6%) were potent with assumption of PDE-5 inhibitors (P1) and 77 (68.8%) experienced erectile dysfunction (P2). The combined SCP outcomes were reported together only in 95 (12.2%) evaluable patients. In patients preoperatively continent and potent, who received a nerve-sparing and did not require adjuvant therapy, oncological and functional success was attained by 29 (30.5%) patients. In the subgroup of 508 patients not evaluable for potency recovery, oncological and continence outcomes were obtained in 357 patients (70.3%). Conclusion Survival, Continence and Potency (SCP) classification offer a comprehensive report of surgical results, even in those patients who do not represent the best category, thus allowing to provide a much more accurate evaluation of outcomes after RP.