Prostate Flashcards
1
Q
Most common type?
A
Adenocarcinoma (95%)
2
Q
RF
A
BRCAII and pTEN genes
3
Q
Clinical presentation
A
Most = aysmptomatic
Prostatism - intermittent stream, frequency, dribbling
Metastatic - bone pain, SCC
4
Q
Investigations
A
- Routine DRE (lump and obliteration of medial sulcus)
- Biopsy = diagnostic
- PSA
- low levels indicate radical surgery
- v. high levels indicate occult metastases - Radionuclide imaging
- MRI
5
Q
Staging
A
T1 = clinically unapparent tumour T2 = confined to prostate capsule T3 = extracapular extension T4 = Tumour fixed to adjacent structure
N1 - local node involvement
6
Q
Management
A
- Observation for T2 or less
- Surgery
- radical if T2 or less (SE = impotence, incontinence)
- Palliative to relieve Sx - Radiotherapy (external beam and/or brachytherapy)
- Radical if T1/2 and no occult mets i.e. not v. high PSA
- Adjuvant - post-op
- Palliative - Hormonal
- LHRH agonists - inhibit prostaglandin release –> reduced testosterone (SE = reduced libido and impotence)
- Anti-androgens - Chemo - docetaxel + prednisilone + cabazitaxel
7
Q
Prognosis indicators
A
PSA - increased = poor prognosis
Post-surgery = 80-90% 10yr survival
Metastatic disease = 2.5 yrs