Home
January 2010 February 2010 March 2010
Su Mo Tu We Th Fr Sa
Week 5 1 2 3 4 5 6
Week 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13
Week 7 14 15 16 17 18 19 20
Week 8 21 22 23 24 25 26 27
Week 9 28
Reach urologists

Visually Directed Transrectal High Intensity Focused Ultrasound for the Treatment of Prostate Cancer: A Preliminary Report on the Italian Experience - Abstract Show Comments PDF Print E-mail
  
Wednesday, 07 January 2009

Department of Urology, University of Perugia, Ospedale Santa Maria della Misericordia, Perugia, Italy.

This email address is being protected from spam bots, you need Javascript enabled to view it

High intensity focused ultrasound is a minimally invasive treatment option for prostate cancer. Data from the literature show promising early oncological outcomes and a favorable side effect profile. This study is a preliminary report of the Italian experience (Perugia and Turin) of patients treated with the Sonablate(R)500 high intensity focused ultrasound device.

Between 2004 and 2007, 163 consecutive men with T1-T3 N0M0 prostate cancer underwent high intensity focused ultrasound with the Sonablate 500. Followup included prostate specific antigen tests at 1 month and then every 3 months after treatment, and a random prostate biopsy at 6 months. Failure was defined according to prostate specific antigen nadir, positive findings on followup biopsy and biochemical failure according to Phoenix criteria.

Median patient age was 72 years old, median baseline prostate specific antigen was 7.3 ng/ml, and disease stage was T1 in 44.1%, T2 in 42.5% and T3a in 13.4% of patients. Median followup was 23.8 months. After high intensity focused ultrasound treatment prostate specific antigen decreased to a median nadir of 0.15 ng/ml. Median prostate specific antigen at 3 and 6 months was 0.30 and 0.54 ng/ml, respectively. At 6 months the negative biopsy rate was 66.1%. There was no biochemical evidence of disease in 71.9% overall. On multivariate analysis prostate specific antigen nadir became the only independent predictor of no biochemical evidence of disease and positive biopsy at a cutoff of 0.40 ng/ml.

A favorable outcome of high intensity focused ultrasound is associated with lower baseline prostate specific antigen, lower prostate specific antigen nadir, lower Gleason score and lower tumor stage. As with any novel technology long-term data will be required before this technique gains widespread clinical acceptance.

Written by:
Mearini L, D'Urso L, Collura D, Zucchi A, Costantini E, Formiconi A, Bini V, Muto G, Porena M.   Are you the author?

Go "Beyond the Abstract" - Read an Article Written by the Author for UroToday.com

Reference:
J Urol. 2009 Jan;181(1):105-12.
doi:10.1016/j.juro.2008.09.024

PubMed Abstract
PMID:19081465

Read an Editorial about this Article by a UroToday.com Contributing Medical Writer

UroToday.com Prostate Cancer Section

 

Reader Comments
Prostate cancer survivor
Written by This email address is being protected from spam bots, you need Javascript enabled to view it on 2009-02-12 13:14:57
HIFU surgery 6/2/2007 
18 month post surgery psa=less than .100(undetectable) 
pre surgery psa = 16 
Gleason score = 8 
T-1 confined stage 
 
Complications: urethral scar tissue stricture=2 post surgery laser surgery/several balloon stretch 
ED and incontinence. 
However, I believe the biomedical failure or any other surgery would result in repeat cancer in 5 years or less. 
I could not wait for long term research on HIFU. 
I would be dead by now if I had not acted promptly. 
I believe less intensive HIFU would result in less scar tissue at the cost of a potential higher psa and recurring cancer. 
Get the FDA off their slow approach and use some international research to get this non-invasive treatment standardized in the USA! 
Thank You,  
Vernon E. Henrich 

Please log-in or register in order to submit comments.

Powered by AkoComment!

 
User Rating: / 1
PoorBest


 
Visitor Ratings:
Healthcare Professionals:
4 (1 votes)


Bookmark and Share

Member's Section

Login

Sign Up

Quick Search

Meet the Expert


All Experts



Featured Conference

Media and Publisher

Advertising Rates

Working with Industry

Case Studies
Sponsorship Opportunities

Prostate Cancer
Sponsored by