Study Type – Therapy (RCT)
Level of Evidence 1b
OBJECTIVE
To confirm the recurrence‐preventing efficacy and safety of 18‐month bacillus Calmette‐Guérin (BCG) maintenance therapy for non‐muscle‐invasive bladder cancer.
PATIENTS AND METHODS
The enrolled patients had been diagnosed with recurrent or multiple non‐muscle‐invasive bladder cancer (stage Ta or T1) after complete transurethral resection of bladder tumours (TURBT).
The patients were randomized into three treatment groups: a maintenance group (BCG, 81 mg, intravesically instilled once weekly for 6 weeks as induction therapy, followed by three once‐weekly instillations at 3, 6, 12 and 18 months after initiation of the induction therapy), a non‐maintenance group (BCG, 81 mg, intravesically instilled once weekly for 6 weeks) and an epirubicin group (epirubicin, 40 mg, intravesically instilled nine times). The primary endpoint was recurrence‐free survival (RFS).
RESULTS
Efficacy analysis was performed for 115 of the full‐analysis‐set population of 116 eligible patients, including 41 maintenance group patients, 42 non‐maintenance group patients and 32 epirubicin group patients.
At the 2‐year median point of the overall actual follow‐up period, the final cumulative RFS rates in the maintenance, non‐maintenance and epirubicin groups were 84.6%, 65.4% and 27.7%, respectively.
The RFS following TURBT was significantly prolonged in the maintenance group compared with the non‐maintenance group (generalized Wilcoxon test, P= 0.0190).
CONCLUSION
BCG maintenance therapy significantly prolonged the post‐TURBT RFS compared with BCG induction therapy alone or epirubicin intravesical therapy.
Overproduction of urine per fat-free mass leads to nocturnal polyuria. Extracellular fluid accumulates as edema in the legs during the day in patients with nocturnal polyuria. The volume of accumulated extracellular fluid correlates with nocturnal urine volume. We suggest that leg edema is the source of nocturnal urine volume and decreasing edema may cure nocturnal polyuria.
Androgen deprivation therapy changed the body composition and lipid profile of men with prostate cancer. It was demonstrated that even Japanese patients with prostate cancer who are treated with androgen deprivation therapy have the risk of developing metabolic syndrome.
The levels of estrogen receptors in human benign prostatic hypertrophy and in various pathological classifications of prostate carcinoma were assessed using immunohistochemical methods. All cases of benign hypertrophy showed elevated levels of estrogen receptor, while receptor-positive cells were detected in only 48% of carcinomas, indicating a negative correlation between receptor status and malignancy. Furthermore, the prognosis for effective endocrine therapy was poor in cases where tissues demonstrated low or negative receptor levels. In addition, the estrogen receptor status was compared to cell kinetic index such as proliferating cell nuclear antigen and argyrophilic staining of the nuclear organizer region.
Background : A pressure-flow study, although a slightly invasive procedure, can evaluate bladder outlet obstruction and detrusor contractility. This study was conducted in men with a non-enlarged prostate to determine the cause of urinary disturbance by less invasive examinations that might eventually replace pressure-flow study. Methods : Thirty-six men with lower urinary tract symptoms were enrolled. Their prostate volume, estimated by transrectal ultrasonography, was less than 20 mL. All patients were examined using pressure-flow study, free-flowmetry, transrectal ultrasonography, prostate specific antigen and an interview using the International Prostate Symptom Score and Quality of Life Index. With determination of the cause for urinary disturbance, parameters that correlated with outflow obstruction or impaired detrusor contractility were sought. Results : Twenty-one (60%) of the 36 men were judged as having outflow obstruction, and 16 of these 21 men had normal detrusor function. Impaired detrusor contractility was observed in 17 men. Only three of these 17 men had no outflow obstruction. Four patients had an unstable bladder. All these four had normal detrusor contractility, but had outflow obstruction. Among the parameters examined, only the maximum flow rate in a flow metrogram (Q max ) correlated significantly with the degree of outflow obstruction ( P = 0.04). The positive predictive value of Q max for outflow obstruction was 65% at a flow rate of less than 10 mL/s, and 100% at that of less than 5 mL/s. No parameter correlated with detrusor contractility. Conclusion : The only parameter that was a clear indicator of outflow obstruction was Q max . Other indicators of detrusor contractility should be sought.
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