USI causes suffering and impaired quality of life among young women. Reluctance to seek help highlights the need to promote women's knowledge of treatment options and cure prospects.
Purpose: The management of mildly elevated (4.0-10.0 ng/ml) prostate specific antigen (PSA) is uncertain. Immediate prostate biopsy, antibiotic treatment, or short term monitoring PSA level for 1-3 months is still in controversy.
Materials and Methods:We conducted a retrospective chart review of patients in a large community practice (2003 -2007) who had PSA levels between 4.0-10 ng/mL without any further evidence of infection. Data was gathered regarding patient's age, whether standard antibiotic therapy (10-14 days of ofloxacin or ciprofloxacin) had been administered before the second PSA measurement, results of a second PSA test performed at 1-to 2-month intervals, whether a prostate biopsy was performed and its result. Results: One-hundred and thirty-five men met the study inclusion criteria with 65 (48.1%) having received antibiotics (group 1); the PSA levels decreased in 39 (60%) of which, sixteen underwent a biopsy which demonstrated prostate cancer in 4 (25%). Twenty-six (40%) patients of group 1 exhibited no decrease in PSA levels; seventeen of them underwent a biopsy that demonstrated cancer in 2 (12%). The other 70 (51.9%) patients were not treated with antibiotics (group 2); the PSA levels decreased in 42 (60%) of which, thirteen underwent a biopsy which demonstrated prostate cancer in 4 (31%). In the other 28 (40%) patients of group 2 there was no demonstrated decrease in PSA, nineteen of these subjects underwent a biopsy that demonstrated cancer in 8 (42%).Conclusions: There appears to be no advantage for administration of antibacterial therapy with initial PSA levels between 4-10 ng/mL without overt evidence of inflammation.
The impact of the improved diagnosis of renal cell carcinoma (RCC) on the course of the disease was evaluated in 188 patients who were diagnosed and treated at a single medical center. Sixty-seven patients (group A) who had undergone nephrectomy between 1979 and 1983 for RCC initially diagnosed by intravenous pyelography (IVP) were compared with 121 patients (group B) who had undergone nephrectomy between 1983 and 1989, diagnosed by ultrasound and/or computed tomography (CT) scan. Incidental asymptomatic tumors were found in 18 of 67 (26.9%) group A patients and in 57 of 121 (47.1%) group B patients (P < 0.001). The incidence of small tumors of < 5 cm in diameter was significantly lower in group A compared to group B (25.4% vs. 47.9%, respectively, P < 0.01). The disease-free 5-year survival rate for group A was 40% compared to 80% for group B. It is concluded that the introduction of modern imaging techniques has improved the survival of patients with RCC and decreased the progression rate of the disease.
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