| Alternative Cancer Treatments | ||
![]() |
![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |
|
|
|
http://www.iht.com/articles/70502.html WASHINGTON
Men with prostate cancer who decide not to undergo surgery and
instead opt to treat only the symptoms of their disease do just about as
well as men who are operated on, at least in the initial six or seven
years after diagnosis. . Neither
strategy shields a man from serious side effects, such as impotence or
urinary problems, although the spectrum of problems differs, depending
on which therapy is chosen. . Those
are the main conclusions of two studies, published in The New England
Journal of Medicine on Thursday, that examined prostate cancer
treatment, one of the most controversial issues in medicine. While the
research produced no clear winner between therapies, it added important
details to the complicated picture of risks and benefits each patient
must confront. . "The
decision will still be difficult," said Lars Holmberg, a Swedish
physician at Uppsala University, who helped lead the experiment.
"But at least now we have a chance for better-informed guesses
about a man's future than we did before." . Prostate
cancer is one of the slowest-growing human cancers, and also one of the
commonest. Small prostate tumors can be found in a majority of men who
die in their 80s of other causes. . Some
doctors oppose routine surgery in elderly men and argue that a cure is
unlikely, complications are common, and a patient is more likely to die
of other causes before the tumor spreads and becomes fatal. Others argue
that surgery is better, largely because doctors believe it extends life.
. The
debate was made more complicated in the last decade by the huge
popularity of prostate specific antigen (PSA) testing, which measures
the blood level of a protein made by growing prostate tissue, including
tumors. PSA testing caused a spike of cancer diagnoses - and operations
- in the early 1990s, especially in men who had no symptoms and were
younger than the age at which prostate cancer had traditionally been
found. . The
Scandinavian study, which enrolled men from 1989 to 1999, straddled that
period. Slightly more than half of patients had symptoms of prostate or
urinary tract disease. In the rest, the cancer was found as the result
of rectal examinations, PSA measurements and other tests. . In
the experiment, nearly 700 Scandinavian men with prostate cancer were
randomly assigned to either undergo potentially curative surgery or to
use "watchful waiting" as the main approach to their disease. . Some
of the men in the watchful-waiting group had surgery if they developed
problems urinating. Many also received hormone or radiation treatments
to shrink the size of their tumors (as did some of the surgery
patients). None of those treatments was intended to cure them, however. . After
about six years, 62 people in the watchful-waiting group had died,
compared with 53 of those assigned to undergo an operation called a
radical prostatectomy. Statistically, this outcome was a draw. . Men
who had surgery, however, had only half the risk of dying of prostate
cancer. This showed that radical prostatectomy appears to be curative in
a substantial number of cases. . Furthermore,
the cancer had spread to distant organs in only half as many men in the
surgery group as in the watchful-waiting group. Because the average
patient lives only two years once the disease gets to that stage, that
observation suggests the surgery group may ultimately survive longer. . In
the second study, the Swedish researchers asked the men about the
complications of their disease and how much the problems bothered them. . Problems
with sexual function were more common in the surgery group (80 percent)
than in the watchful-waiting group (45 percent), as were problems of
urine leakage (49 percent compared with 21 percent). Difficulty
urinating was more common in the watchful-waiting patients (44 percent
compared with 28 percent). Most of the surgery patients did not get
"nerve-sparing" operations, which appear to reduce the risk of
those complications. . Overall,
about 35 percent of men in both groups reported "low or
moderate" psychological well-being, and about 40 percent in both
reported "low or moderate" quality of life. Gunnar Steineck,
an oncologist and epidemiologist at the Karolinska Institute in
Stockholm, said that previously the assumption had been that if a
patient chose surgery, he "had to trade quality of life to win
length of life. The results of the study do not support that." . Overall,
Steineck said, "I think doctors are going to be on much safer
ground depicting the alternative treatment scenarios." . There
may be debate among American physicians "about what does it mean in
the real world," said Martin Resnick, a urologist at Case Western
Reserve University, and president-elect of the American Urological
Association. . The
average age of men in the Scandinavian study was 65. In the United
States, the average age of men diagnosed with prostate cancer has been
falling steadily and is now about 60. Furthermore, most cases are found
through PSA testing and before the patients have any symptoms. . "It
is not uncommon to find men in their early fifties who have prostate
cancer, while that was highly unusual a decade ago," he said. How
watchful waiting performs in that group is unknown, but a clinical trial
is under way in Veterans Affairs hospitals trying to answer the
question. |
|
![]() |
![]() |
|
"Alternative Cancer Treatments"
Michael Guthrie,
R.Ph. CGP 2003-2006
|
||