Salvage lymph node dissection in radical prostatectomy failure – a case study
Authors:
N. Marečková; M. Staník; D. Macík; J. Doležel
Authors‘ workplace:
Oddělení urologické onkologie, Klinika operační onkologie LF Masarykovy univerzity a Masarykova onkologického ústavu Brno
přednosta: doc. MUDr. R. Šefr, Ph. D.
Published in:
Rozhl. Chir., 2017, roč. 96, č. 6, s. 260-262.
Category:
Case Report
Overview
Salvage lymph node dissection is a therapeutic option in patients with nodal-only recurrence after radical prostatectomy. Although this operation does not achieve a complete cure in the majority of cases, it can prolong survival and help postpone hormonal therapy in selected patients while being a relatively safe procedure.
The authors describe a case study of a radical prostatectomy patient with radiologically proven recurrence of prostate cancer limited to an internal iliac node. He underwent salvage lymph node dissection with a complete biochemical response. Remission lasts 13 months following surgery and the patient is currently without the need for androgen deprivation therapy.
Key words:
salvage lymph node dissection − prostate cancer − radical prostatectomy − neoplasm recurrence
Sources
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6. Rigatti P, Suardi N, Briganti A, et al. Pelvic/retroperitoneal salvage lymph node dissection for patients treated with radical prostatec-tomy with biochemical recurrence and nodal recurrence detected by [11C]choline positron emission tomography/computed tomog-raphy. Eur Urol 2011;60:935–43.
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Labels
Surgery Orthopaedics Trauma surgeryArticle was published in
Perspectives in Surgery
2017 Issue 6
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