Prostate Cancer

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Darolutamide with androgen deprivation therapy has shown promising efficacy and safety results for patients with hormone-sensitive prostate cancer.
FDA Accepts sNDA for Darolutamide/ADT in Hormone-Sensitive Prostate Cancer

November 21st 2024

Darolutamide with androgen deprivation therapy has shown promising efficacy and safety results for patients with hormone-sensitive prostate cancer.

Pembrolizumab with platinum-based chemotherapy yielded encouraging progression-free and overall survival outcomes in this patient population.
Pembrolizumab/Cisplatin Combo Shows Promise in Small Cell Bladder Cancer, Neuroendocrine Prostate Cancer

November 18th 2024

Stereotactic body radiotherapy showed noninferior biochemical or clinical failure compared with standard radiotherapy in select patients with prostate cancer.
SBRT Emerges as Viable Treatment for Localized Prostate Cancer

November 12th 2024

The Evolving Landscape of Prostate Cancer Management
The Evolving Landscape of Prostate Cancer Management

October 28th 2024

Data from the ARANOTE trial may support darolutamide plus androgen deprivation therapy as a standard of care in metastatic HSPC.
Darolutamide/ADT Improves rPFS in Metastatic HSPC

October 13th 2024

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Imaging Prostate Cancer: Current and Future Applications

March 1st 2001

Various treatment options are available for adenocarcinoma of the prostate-the most common malignant neoplasm among men in the United States. To select an optimum management strategy, we must be able to identify an organ-confined disease (in which local therapy such as surgery or radiation may be beneficial) vs prostate cancer beyond the confines of the gland (for which other treatment approaches may be more appropriate). At present, no standard imaging modality can by itself reliably diagnose and/or stage adenocarcinoma of the prostate. Standard transrectal ultrasound, magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), computed tomography, bone scans, and plain x-ray are not sufficiently reliable when used alone. Fortunately, advances in imaging technology have led to the development of several promising modalities. These modalities include color and power Doppler ultrasonography, ultrasound contrast agents, intermittent and harmonic ultrasound imaging, MR contrast imaging, MRI with fat suppression, MRI spectroscopy, three-dimensional MRI spectroscopy, elastography, and radioimmunoscintigraphy. These newer imaging techniques appear to improve the yield of prostate cancer detection and staging, but are limited in availability and thus require further validation. This article reviews the status of current imaging modalities for prostate cancer and identifies emerging imaging technologies that may improve the diagnosis and staging of this disease. [ONCOLOGY 15(3):325-342, 2001]