Subcapsular orchiectomy in the primary therapy of patients with bone metastasis in advanced prostate cancer: An anachronistic intervention? - Abstract

Department of Urology, St. Elisabeth Klinikum Straubing, St. Elisabeth Straße 23, 94315 Straubing, Germany.

 

The therapeutic impact of palliative androgen deprivation in metastatic prostate cancer is indisputable. Bilateral orchiectomy represents the traditional method of AD but was reduced during the last years in favor for treatment with LHRH analogues. Due to limited economic resources of the health care system, the economically priced definite surgical castration might experience a renaissance.

In this single-center retrospective study, 83 consecutive patients with osseous metastasized prostate cancer were evaluated, who had primarily been treated by subcapsular bilateral orchiectomy. Response to therapy, time until therapy failure, overall survival time, psychological disorders due to loss of organ, and disease-associated and postoperative surgical complications were recorded. The median followup was 35 months (IQR: 26-46).

Patients' mean age at surgery was 72.1 (54-91) years. Six patients (7.2%) displayed immediate tumor progression after orchiectomy. Median time of tumor remission and overall survival time were 29 and 36 months, respectively. 14% of the study group showed minor postoperative complications. No psychological problems occurred following bilateral orchiectomy.

Due to an effective and persistent oncological effectiveness, less morbidity, and absence of psychological implications, bilateral subcapsular orchiectomy seems to be a practicable and advisable alternative in the first-line therapy of metastasized PCa.

Written by:
Rud O, Peter J, Kheyri R, Gilfrich C, Ahmed AM, Boeckmann W, Fabricius PG, May M.   Are you the author?

Reference: Adv Urol. 2012;2012:190624.
doi: 10.1155/2012/190624

PubMed Abstract
PMID: 21922019

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