Death Risk in Prostate Cancer can be Predicted Through Genes

ICRAccording to researchers at Britain’s Institute of Cancer Research (ICR), a combination of three genetic abnormalities has a dramatic impact on how long prostate cancer patients are likely to live. They added that prostate cancer patients should be tested for specific genetic factors before doctors decide how aggressively to treat their tumors.

Study: Hormone therapy for prostate cancer patients riskier for certain men

BrighamA study conducted by Brigham & Women’s Hospital-Dana-Farber Cancer Institute indicated that prostate cancer patients with certain heart conditions who received hormone therapy either before or with radiation therapy were at higher risk of death than equivalent patients who did not have hormone therapy. The study reflected that the risk of death nearly doubled for men with coronary artery disease-induced congestive heart failure or heart attack when they received hormone therapy in addition to radiation therapy.

New approach eliminates post-surgery pain

To relieve the patients who have undergone prostate cancer surgery from the pain of recovery, doctors at Weill Cornell Medical College have developed an approach which is patient-friendly in the sense that it eliminates the use of a penile urinary catheter. The novel technique which is used along with robotic prostatectomy (the surgical removal of the prostate) does away with the discomfort that is associated with the standard catheter. In this approach, urine is redirected from the bladder through a narrow tube that goes out through a small needle puncture below the gut.

PSA test losing value in predicting prostate cancer

The value of the prostate-specific antigen (PSA) test as a diagnostic tool for prostate cancer has declined following changes in medical practice, according to a new study. Study author Dr. Douglas S. Scherr said that the PSA test is still very predictive in men with an abnormal digital rectal examination, while for men with a normal digital rectal examination, the test’s predictive accuracy has declined. For the latter category of men, doctors are opting for biopsies and are using improved biopsy techniques.