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AUA GUIDELINE: CLINICALLY LOCALIZED PROSTATE CANCER 2017

Risk stratification
Shared-decision making
    • Surgery patients may experience bleeding, infection, and pain in the immediate term and then experience erectile dysfunction, urinary incontinence, urethral stricture and (very rarely) bowel problems.
    • The same side effects observed after surgery are possible with radiotherapy (RT) approaches, though bowel problems are more common, and sexual and continence side effects take much longer to develop.
    • Erectile dysfunction and urinary bother beyond 2-5 years may be similar between surgery and RT
    • RT causes more urinary irritation (brachytherapy more than external beam RT (EBRT)) and modestly more gastrointestinal side effects than radical prostatectomy
    • RT may be associated with a very small but increased risk for secondary cancer, specifically bladder cancer and rectal cancer. The suspected incidence of radiation-induced second primary cancers is reported to affect between 1-3% of patients in the years following treatment.
    • The risk of perioperative death from prostate cancer surgery is <0.1%
Treatment Options by Risk-Group

 

Questions
  1. Describe the risk classification of clinically localized prostate cancer?
  2. Which patients with clinically localized prostate cancer should undergo staging investigations?
  3. When is a lymph node dissection indicated in patients undergoing radical prostatectomy for clinically localized prostate cancer?
  4. What are the preferred treatment options by risk category in clinically localized prostate cancer?
  5. What are risk factors for reclassification on subsequent biopsy during active surveillance?
  6. Describe the follow-up on patients managed with AS?
  7. What is the management of a symptomatic lymphocele following radical prostatectomy?
  8. What are contraindications to radiotherapy for localized prostate cancer?
  9. What is PSA value is considered treatment success in clinically localized prostate cancer?

 

Answers
  1. Describe the risk classification of clinically localized prostate cancer.
    1. Very low-risk: low-risk + PSA density <0.15, <34% cores positive, no more than 50% of one core
    2. Low-risk: PSA<10, cT2a, GG1
    3. Intermediate-risk: PSA 10-20, cT2b/c, GG2 or 3
      • Favourable: GG1 and PSA 10-20 or GG2 and PSA <10
    1. High-risk: PSA >20, cT3, GG4-5
  2. Which patients with clinically localized prostate cancer should undergo staging investigations?
    1. High-risk and intermediate-risk patients with 2 of: Gleason 7, palpable tumour on DRE, PSA 10-20
  3. When is a lymph node dissection indicated in patients undergoing radical prostatectomy for clinically localized prostate cancer?
    1. Intermediate-risk, unfavourable
    2. High-risk
  4. What are the preferred treatment options by risk category in clinically localized prostate cancer?
    1. WW if life expectancy ≤5 years
    2. Very-low risk: AS
    3. Low-risk: AS
    4. Intermedite-risk: RP, EBRT + 6 mo ADT, brachy, or EBRT + brachy + 6 mo ADT
    5. High-risk: RP, EBRT + 24-36 months brachy, HDR brachy
  5. What are risk factors for reclassification on subsequent biopsy during active surveillance?
    1. Obesity
    2. African American race
    3. PSA density > 0.15
    4. Extensive Gleason 6 cancer on systematic biopsy cores
  6. Describe the follow-up on patients managed with AS?
    1. PSA every 3-6 months
    2. DRE each year
    3. Systematic biopsies within 6-12 months after the diagnostic biopsy, and then every 3-5 years until the patient is ‘switched’ to watchful waiting
  7. What is the management of a symptomatic lymphocele following radical prostatectomy?
    1. Percutaneous drain à sclerosing agent à marsupialization
  8. What are contraindications to radiotherapy for localized prostate cancer?
    1. Size > 60g for brachy
    2. TURP for brachy
    3. LUTS severe
    4. IBD
    5. Ataxia telengectasia
    6. Radiation pelvic
  9. What is PSA value is considered treatment success in clinically localized prostate cancer?
    1. < 0.2 ng/mL for RP
    2. < 2.0 ng/mL for RT