Advanced-stage prostate cancer
patients experience 20-year survival rates with surgery
Long-term survival rates for patients with advanced prostate
cancer suggest they can be good candidates for surgery, Mayo Clinic researchers
have found. Their study found a 20-year survival rate for 80 percent of patients
diagnosed with cancer that has potentially spread beyond the prostate, known as
cT3 prostate cancer, and treated with radical prostatectomy, or surgery to remove
the prostate gland. Previously, patients found to have cT3 prostate cancer were
offered radiation or hormone treatment, but not radical prostatectomy.
The researchers presented their findings during the American Urological Association
Annual Meeting in Washington.
"We are doing a much better job of identifying and expanding candidates
for surgery, which results in better, longer outcomes for so many of our patients,"
says R. Jeffrey Karnes, M.D., of Mayo Clinic's Department of Urology. "We
have confirmed that patients diagnosed with locally advanced prostate cancer can
enjoy a long, cancer-free interval."
The 80 percent survival rate for cT3 diagnoses at 20 years compares to 90 percent
for cT2, or cancer confined to the prostate. This long-term follow-up of patients
who underwent surgery between 1987 and 1997 is an important advance in understanding
the quality outcomes for cT3 patients. The study sample included patients diagnosed
and operated on between 1987 and 1997. Ongoing research will examine contemporary
data.
Other study investigators include Christopher Mitchell, M.D., Eric Umbreit,
M.D., Rachel Carlson and Laureano Rangel, all of Mayo Clinic.
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