This report is a retrospective clinical randomized study carried out on 114 cases of incidental prostatic carcinoma aged 55-87 years, 58 untreated and 56 treated with cyproterone acetate (CPA 200 mg/day) for 6 months, immediately after surgery. Seventy-eight cases were staged A1 and the remaining 36 A2. In stage A1, 75 cases were histologically graded G1, and 3 G2, whereas in A2, 7 cases were G1, 19 G2 and 10 G3. Moreover, flow cytometric DNA analysis showed in A1 20 G1 carcinomas with nuclear diploidy and 3 G2 with nuclear aneuploidy, in stage A2, 4 G3 tumors with nuclear aneuploidy. During the 4-year follow-up, 25/58 patients of the untreated group and 15/56 of the CPA-treated group were found in progression. In A1, progression was found in 6/37 untreated patients and 5/41 CPA-treated, whilst in A2 progression was observed in 19/21 untreated patients and in 10/15 treated with CPA. The critical period for progression was between the 2nd and 3rd year of follow-up. In A1, therefore, 6 months of therapy with CPA does not modify the progression rate, which is significantly improved in A2 (66% in the treated and 90% in the untreated group) during the first 30 months of follow-up. The prognosis may probably be further improved by continuing endocrine therapy.
Incidental prostatic carcinoma: Four-year follow-up after treatment with cyproterone acetate / DI SILVERIO, Franco; F., Sciarra; D'Eramo, Giuseppe; R., Tenaglia. - In: EUROPEAN UROLOGY. - ISSN 0302-2838. - STAMPA. - 18:4(1990), pp. 263-266.
Incidental prostatic carcinoma: Four-year follow-up after treatment with cyproterone acetate
DI SILVERIO, Franco;D'ERAMO, Giuseppe;
1990
Abstract
This report is a retrospective clinical randomized study carried out on 114 cases of incidental prostatic carcinoma aged 55-87 years, 58 untreated and 56 treated with cyproterone acetate (CPA 200 mg/day) for 6 months, immediately after surgery. Seventy-eight cases were staged A1 and the remaining 36 A2. In stage A1, 75 cases were histologically graded G1, and 3 G2, whereas in A2, 7 cases were G1, 19 G2 and 10 G3. Moreover, flow cytometric DNA analysis showed in A1 20 G1 carcinomas with nuclear diploidy and 3 G2 with nuclear aneuploidy, in stage A2, 4 G3 tumors with nuclear aneuploidy. During the 4-year follow-up, 25/58 patients of the untreated group and 15/56 of the CPA-treated group were found in progression. In A1, progression was found in 6/37 untreated patients and 5/41 CPA-treated, whilst in A2 progression was observed in 19/21 untreated patients and in 10/15 treated with CPA. The critical period for progression was between the 2nd and 3rd year of follow-up. In A1, therefore, 6 months of therapy with CPA does not modify the progression rate, which is significantly improved in A2 (66% in the treated and 90% in the untreated group) during the first 30 months of follow-up. The prognosis may probably be further improved by continuing endocrine therapy.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.