Radiation After Surgery Helps Prostate Cancer Patients Live Longer

Prostate cancer patients who receive radiation therapy within six months after surgery live longer than patients who do not receive radiation afterwards, according to a new study.

June 22, 2004. — Prostate cancer patients who receive radiation therapy within six months after surgery live longer than patients who do not receive radiation afterwards, according to a new study in the July 1, 2004, issue of the International Journal of Radiation Oncology*Biology*Physics, the official journal of ASTRO, the American Society for Therapeutic Radiology and Oncology.

Between 1986 and 1999, 415 patients underwent surgery to remove their prostate and surrounding lymph nodes. The patients were then split into two groups ? those who were scheduled for external beam radiation therapy within six months of surgery and those who would be followed over time and possibly undergo radiation therapy later if the cancer showed signs of returning. None of the patients showed any evidence of metastatic disease.

Within eight years, prostate specific antigen tests on the patients revealed that 69 percent of patients who received radiation therapy within six months of surgery showed no signs of the prostate cancer returning while 31 percent of patients who did not have radiation at all or had radiation after the cancer recurred. Researchers also found that the disease remained localized in the prostate for 93 percent of the patients in the radiation therapy group compared with 63 percent in the other. The risk of death from localized prostate cancer was also significantly lower in the radiation therapy group.

?To my knowledge, this is the largest study of its kind completed at a single institution,? said Cesare Cozzarini, M.D., a radiation oncologist at San Raffaele H. Scientific Institute in Milan, Italy. ?The results show that radiation therapy after surgery helps limit the chances that the cancer will recur allowing prostate patients to live longer.?

Source: American Society for Therapeutic Radiology and Oncology (ASTRO)

For more information on radiation therapy for prostate cancer, please visit http://www.astro.org/patient/treatment_information/ for a free brochure.

Related

Post-operative radiotherapy improves progression-free survival in prostate cancer Oct 2004

Transdermal Estradiol Therapy for Prostate Cancer

Australasian trial will test impact of hormonal therapy for prostate cancer on survival and quality of life April 2005

Provenge "Significantly Improves" Survival In Men With Advanced Prostate Cancer Feb 17, 2005

Silent risk of osteoporosis in men with prostate cancer Dec 2004

New View of Recurrent Prostate Cancer Feb 2004

Racial Difference in Androgen Receptor May Explain Aggressive Prostate Cancer in African-American Men Sept 2003

Information on this website is not intended as medical advice nor to be taken as such. Consult qualified physicians specializing in the treatment of prostate cancer. Neither the editors nor the publisher accepts any responsibility for the accuracy of the information or consequences from the use or misuse of the information contained on this website.

Wear blue Prostate Cancer Awareness ribbon! About Us | Content Policy/Disclaimer | Privacy Policy