- •Table of Contents
- •Copyright
- •Contributors
- •How to Use this Study Guide
- •Questions
- •Answers
- •Questions
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- •Questions
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- •4: Outcomes Research
- •Questions
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- •5: Core Principles of Perioperative Care
- •Questions
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- •Questions
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- •7: Principles of Urologic Endoscopy
- •Questions
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- •8: Percutaneous Approaches to the Upper Urinary Tract Collecting System
- •Questions
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- •Questions
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- •Questions
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- •12: Infections of the Urinary Tract
- •Questions
- •Answers
- •Questions
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- •15: Sexually Transmitted Diseases
- •Questions
- •Answers
- •Questions
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- •20: Principles of Tissue Engineering
- •Questions
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- •Questions
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- •22: Male Reproductive Physiology
- •Questions
- •Answers
- •Questions
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- •24: Male Infertility
- •Questions
- •Answers
- •Questions
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- •Questions
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- •Questions
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- •28: Priapism
- •Questions
- •Answers
- •Questions
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- •30: Surgery for Erectile Dysfunction
- •Questions
- •Answers
- •Questions
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- •Questions
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- •Questions
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- •34: Neoplasms of the Testis
- •Questions
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- •35: Surgery of Testicular Tumors
- •Questions
- •Answers
- •36: Laparoscopic and Robotic-Assisted Retroperitoneal Lymphadenectomy for Testicular Tumors
- •Questions
- •Answers
- •37: Tumors of the Penis
- •Questions
- •Answers
- •38: Tumors of the Urethra
- •Questions
- •Answers
- •39: Inguinal Node Dissection
- •Questions
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- •40: Surgery of the Penis and Urethra
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- •Questions
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- •Questions
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- •47: Renal Transplantation
- •Questions
- •Answers
- •Questions
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- •Questions
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- •50: Upper Urinary Tract Trauma
- •Questions
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- •Questions
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- •53: Strategies for Nonmedical Management of Upper Urinary Tract Calculi
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- •54: Surgical Management for Upper Urinary Tract Calculi
- •Questions
- •Answers
- •55: Lower Urinary Tract Calculi
- •Questions
- •Answers
- •56: Benign Renal Tumors
- •Questions
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- •57: Malignant Renal Tumors
- •Questions
- •Answers
- •Questions
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- •59: Retroperitoneal Tumors
- •Questions
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- •60: Open Surgery of the Kidney
- •Questions
- •Answers
- •Questions
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- •62: Nonsurgical Focal Therapy for Renal Tumors
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- •66: Surgery of the Adrenal Glands
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- •Questions
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- •71: Evaluation and Management of Women with Urinary Incontinence and Pelvic Prolapse
- •Questions
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- •72: Evaluation and Management of Men with Urinary Incontinence
- •Questions
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- •Questions
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- •Questions
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- •Questions
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- •76: Overactive Bladder
- •Questions
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- •77: Underactive Detrusor
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- •78: Nocturia
- •Questions
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- •Questions
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- •Questions
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- •Questions
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- •82: Retropubic Suspension Surgery for Incontinence in Women
- •Questions
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- •83: Vaginal and Abdominal Reconstructive Surgery for Pelvic Organ Prolapse
- •Questions
- •Answers
- •Questions
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- •85: Complications Related to the Use of Mesh and Their Repair
- •Questions
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- •86: Injection Therapy for Urinary Incontinence
- •Questions
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- •87: Additional Therapies for Storage and Emptying Failure
- •Questions
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- •88: Aging and Geriatric Urology
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- •89: Urinary Tract Fistulae
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- •92: Tumors of the Bladder
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- •95: Transurethral and Open Surgery for Bladder Cancer
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- •99: Orthotopic Urinary Diversion
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- •108: Prostate Cancer Tumor Markers
- •Questions
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- •110: Pathology of Prostatic Neoplasia
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- •114: Open Radical Prostatectomy
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- •116: Radiation Therapy for Prostate Cancer
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- •117: Focal Therapy for Prostate Cancer
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- •119: Management of Biomedical Recurrence Following Definitive Therapy for Prostate Cancer
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- •120: Hormone Therapy for Prostate Cancer
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- •124: Perinatal Urology
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- •126: Pediatric Urogenital Imaging
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- •133: Surgery of the Ureter in Children
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- •137: Vesicoureteral Reflux
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- •138: Bladder Anomalies in Children
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- •139: Exstrophy-Epispadias Complex
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- •140: Prune-Belly Syndrome
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- •144: Management of Defecation Disorders
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- •147: Hypospadias
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- •Questions
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- •152: Adolescent and Transitional Urology
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- •Questions
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- •154: Pediatric Genitourinary Trauma
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- •Questions
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- •Questions
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119
Management of Biomedical Recurrence Following Definitive Therapy for Prostate Cancer
Eugene Kang Lee; J. Brantley Thrasher
Questions
1.What have the American Urological Association (AUA) and European Association of Urology (EUA) determined as the definition of prostatespecific antigen (PSA) failure following radical prostatectomy?
a.Any level of detectable PSA following radical prostatectomy
b.Two values of 0.1 ng/mL or higher
c.0.2 ng/mL
d.0.2 ng/mL with a confirmatory value
e.0.4 ng/mL with a confirmatory value
2.Which is NOT considered a high-risk feature following radical prostatectomy in determining the benefit of adjuvant radiation therapy?
a.Positive surgical margin
b.Positive pelvic lymph node
c.Seminal vesicle invasion
d.Extracapsular extension
e.Pathologic T3 prostate cancer
3.Which imaging modality in PSA recurrence following radical prostatectomy has the highest sensitivity at the lowest PSA values?
a.Radionucleotide bone scan
b.Computed tomography (CT) of abdomen/pelvis
c.Fluorodeoxyglucose–positron emission tomography (FDG-PET) scan
d.Prostascint scan
e.Multiparametric magnetic resonance imaging (MRI)
4.What is the minimum recommended dosage for salvage radiotherapy?
a.43 Gy
b.54 Gy
c.64 Gy
d.72 Gy
e.78 Gy
5.In Southwest Oncology Group (SWOG) 8794, which subset of patients did not benefit from adjuvant radiation therapy following radical prostatectomy?
a.Positive surgical margins
b.Seminal vesicle involvement
c.Extracapsular extension
d.None of the patients benefited from adjuvant radiation.
e.All of the subgroups benefited from adjuvant radiation.
6.Which of the following factors was NOT a part of the "Phoenix" definition of PSA failure following definitive radiotherapy for prostate cancer?
a.Can be used in patients receiving cryotherapy for prostate cancer
b.Can be used in patients receiving concurrent androgen deprivation therapy
c.PSA failure is defined as a rise of 2 ng/mL or more higher than the nadir PSA
d.Date of failure is "at call"
e.Biochemical outcomes should be 2 years short of the median follow-up for the group
7.Candidates for salvage prostatectomy following failed radiation therapy of the prostate should have all but which factor before treatment?
a.Negative metastatic workup
b.At least 10 years of life expectancy
c.Biopsy-proven local recurrence
d.Negative pelvic lymph node sampling
e.PSA value less than 10 ng/mL
8.Which has the highest sensitivity in detecting recurrent local disease following radiation therapy for prostate cancer?
a.Rectal exam
b.Transrectal ultrasound
c.MRI
d.Prostascint scan
e.PET scan
9.Which of these is NOT a commonly known side effect of androgen deprivation therapy (ADT)?
a.Decreased bone mineral density
b.Mania
c.Hot flashes
d.Fatigue
e.Sexual side effects
.The most important therapeutic consideration in selecting either local salvage therapy or systemic therapy for a patient with a rising PSA value after definitive local therapy is:
a.patients with a rising PSA level after definitive local therapy should be started on hormonal therapy because they are destined to experience systemic relapse.
b.patients with a rising PSA level should undergo salvage local procedures, such as radiation or cryotherapy or prostatectomy, before undergoing any systemic treatment.
c.patients with a rising PSA level and no metastatic disease should be started on chemotherapy.
d.patients with a rising PSA level should undergo neither systemic nor local treatments, because the only appropriate context in which to begin any intervention is when radiographic metastases have developed.
e.patients with a rising PSA level should be risk stratified and treated with a modality of therapy that matches their risk of relapse, risk of developing local versus systemic disease, and risk of dying of other causes.
Answers
1.d. 0.2 ng/mL with a confirmatory value. Throughout the radical prostatectomy literature, there have been more than 50 individual definitions for PSA failure. In 2007, the AUA Guidelines panel for localized prostate cancer released its recommendations for PSA failure following radical prostatectomy as 0.2 ng/mL with a confirmatory value greater than 0.2 ng/mL (Cookson et al, 2007).* Although higher values would result in greater specificity for disease recurrence and progression, the value of 0.2 ng/mL resulted in higher sensitivity and generalizability. The panel reported that in
no way should this individual definition be used for determining the usage of adjuvant/salvage therapies and reiterated that this definition is not predictive of death outcomes.
2.b. Positive pelvic lymph node. It has been demonstrated in wellperformed randomized clinical trials that patients with high-risk features following radical prostatectomy will benefit from adjuvant radiotherapy.
SWOG 8794, European Organisation for Research and Treatment of Cancer (EORTC) 22911 and ARO 96-02 defined their patient population as those with extracapsular extension, positive seminal vesicles, and/or positive surgical margins (Bolla et al, 2005; Thompson IM et al, 2009, 2013; Thompson IM Jr et al, 2006; Wiegel et al, 2009).
3.e. Multiparametric magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). Traditional imaging techniques such as CT scan and bone scan demonstrate limited value at PSA values less than10 ng/mL (Dotan et al, 2005; Okotie et al, 2004). Multiparametric MRI has shown reliability in identifying local recurrence even at low levels of PSA. In fact, MRI sensitivity may be as high as 86% at PSA values between 0.4 and 1.4 ng/mL and has also demonstrated an ability to perform better than PET-CT (Panebianco et al, 2012; Sciarra et al, 2008).
4.c. 64 Gy. In 1999, the American Society for Therapeutic Radiation Oncology (ASTRO) guidelines panel concluded that a minimum of 64 Gy should be used for salvage radiation following radical prostatectomy (Cox JD et al, 1999). This dosage was confirmed by the AUA guidelines in 2013 (Thompson IM et al, 2013). Modern reports suggest that salvage radiation dosages as high as 76 Gy may demonstrate effective biochemical recurrence-free survival with reasonable toxicities (De Meerleer et al, 2008; Ost, Lumen et al, 2011). It is hoped that studies such as SAKK 09/10 will clarify the role of dose escalation and identify an optimal therapeutic window for salvage radiation (http://clinicaltrials.gov/show/NCT01272050).
5.e. All of the subgroups benefited from adjuvant radiation. SWOG 8794 demonstrated the effectiveness of 60 to 64 Gy of adjuvant radiation following radical prostatectomy. Adjuvant radiation improved metastasis-free and overall survival. The study population included patients with high-risk features defined as extracapsular extension, seminal vesicle involvement, and positive surgical margins (Thompson IM et al, 2009; Thompson IM Jr et al, 2006).
6.a. Can be used in patients receiving cryotherapy for prostate cancer. In
2005, the "Phoenix definition" was created with the following criteria: rise of 2 ng/mL higher than the nadir PSA, failure was determined "at call," biochemical outcomes should be reported 2 years short of the median follow-up of the population, and could be used in patients who received concurrent ADT (Roach et al, 2006). The "Phoenix" definition was not meant to be used for other modalities of prostate cancer treatment.
7.d. Negative pelvic lymph node sampling. Although modern series of salvage prostatectomy demonstrate improved morbidity, patient selection is of the utmost importance (Heidenreich et al, 2010; Stephenson, Scardino et al, 2004). Patients who are candidates for salvage surgery must have at least
10 years of life expectancy, a negative metastatic workup, biopsy-proven local recurrence, and ideally a PSA value less than 10 ng/mL. A separate negative pelvic lymph node sampling is not imperative before undergoing salvage surgery, although sending lymph nodes for frozen section before prostatectomy would not be unreasonable.
8.c. MRI. Traditional imaging modalities have not demonstrated consistent ability to detect radiorecurrent prostate cancer. TRUS demonstrates sensitivities no better than digital rectal exam, and CT scans are not relevant at PSA values less than 20 ng/mL (Crook J et al, 1993). Alternatively, MRI with contrast enhancement, spectroscopy, and diffusion-weighted imaging has demonstrated improved sensitivity (Haider et al, 2008; Hara et al, 2012; Westphalen et al, 2010). In fact, diffusion-weighted imaging has demonstrated a sensitivity and specificity of 100% using a 22-core biopsy as a reference (Hara et al, 2012).
9.b. Mania. All other answers are commonly reported side effects of patients undergoing ADT.
.e. Patients with a rising PSA level should be risk stratified and treated with a modality of therapy that matches their risk of relapse, risk of developing local versus systemic disease, and risk of dying of other causes. In the setting of biochemical recurrence following radical prostatectomy, patients' risks of metastasis and death are variable (Pound et al, 1999). Both metastasis-free and prostate-cancer survival depend on several factors such as Gleason score, PSA doubling time, and time from surgery to biochemical recurrence (Antonarakis et al, 2012; Freedland et al, 2005, 2006). All of these factors must be considered in salvage therapies. Clearly, patients with significant comorbidities and limited life expectancy are not good candidates for salvage local therapies, and this should be taken into
consideration. The use of nomograms to help in decision-making processes is paramount.
Chapter review
1.After discontinued use of ablative hormonal therapy, testosterone levels generally return to baseline within 3 to 6 months; however, some patients can have extremely prolonged recovery periods, and some never recover. A follow-up serum testosterone must be obtained when evaluating a patient for treatment effect.
2.In the overwhelming majority of patients, biochemical relapse occurs far earlier than the development of radiographically observed metastases: In one study of radical prostatectomy patients, those in whom metastases developed on average were found to have them 8 years following the PSA recurrence, and in this group death due to prostate cancer occurred 5 years later.
3.Parameters often used in predicting the significance of a rising PSA level include pretreatment PSA level, grade of tumor, pathologic stage, time to relapse, and PSA doubling time (PSADT).
4.PSADT is often used to predict the time to the development of metastatic disease; however, it is unlikely that PSA kinetics follow the model of a single exponential equation. Therefore it is extremely difficult in many patients over a long period of time to characterize the PSADT.
5.The use of adjuvant androgen deprivation therapy because of a rising PSA value should take into account its effects on cognitive function, well-being, sexual health, cardiovascular risk, and the development of diabetes and osteoporosis, as well as the likelihood that it would be effective in eradicating disease.
6.Patients who have demonstrable disease in the prostatic bed after radical prostatectomy should be considered for salvage radiation and/or hormonal therapy.
7.It is controversial whether an ultrasensitive PSA nadir is helpful in predicting clinical disease progression.
8.Several studies have suggested that patients with positive surgical margins benefit from adjuvant radiation therapy, and some studies suggest that those with T3a and T3b disease benefit as well; however, a significant number of these patients will never have a biochemical relapse without treatment.
9.Adjuvant radiation therapy may result in total urinary incontinence, radiation proctitis, radiation cystitis, and urethral stricture.
* Sources referenced can be found in Campbell-Walsh Urology, 11th Edition, on the Expert Consult website.