The role of surgery in high risk and advanced prostate cancer: A narrative review.
Chloe Sheila Dayan RoyAshwin SachdevaGokul Vignesh KandaswamyBhavan Prasad RaiPublished in: Turkish journal of urology (2020)
Patients with high-risk and advanced prostate cancer require safe and efficacious therapies likely to offer a survival advantage while minimizing the treatment-related toxicities. Improvements in the surgical technology, diagnostic modalities, radiological staging, and risk stratification have made surgery for high-risk and advanced prostate cancer a safe and feasible option. In this review, we outline the role of radical prostatectomy in high-risk localized, locally advanced, and metastatic prostate cancer. We overview available data evaluating the use of surgery in the context of a multi-modal approach and highlight ongoing trials in this area. Furthermore, the role of surgery as a non-systemic modality for metastasis-directed therapy (MDT) is also described. Emerging imaging modalities enabling more accurate staging and longer follow-up of clinical trials for prognostic endpoints are anticipated to help identify patient cohorts and treatment strategies, where the use of surgical treatments is likely to provide oncological benefits and acceptable toxicity.
Keyphrases
- prostate cancer
- radical prostatectomy
- minimally invasive
- coronary artery bypass
- clinical trial
- squamous cell carcinoma
- surgical site infection
- high resolution
- locally advanced
- randomized controlled trial
- lymph node
- rectal cancer
- stem cells
- pet ct
- coronary artery disease
- percutaneous coronary intervention
- bone marrow
- study protocol
- case report
- mesenchymal stem cells
- artificial intelligence
- data analysis