Percutaneous prostate cryoablation as treatment for high-risk prostate cancer

Authors

  • Omar Reda El Hayek São Paulo University; Medical School; Hospital das Clínicas
  • Wladimir Alfer Jr. São Paulo University; Medical School; Hospital das Clínicas
  • Ernesto Reggio São Paulo University; Medical School; Hospital das Clínicas
  • Antonio Carlos L. Pompeo São Paulo University; Medical School; Hospital das Clínicas
  • Sami Arap São Paulo University; Medical School; Hospital das Clínicas
  • Miguel Srougi São Paulo University; Medical School; Hospital das Clínicas

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1590/S1807-59322007000200003

Keywords:

Cryotherapy, Prostatic neoplasms, Salvage cryotherapy

Abstract

PURPOSE: To evaluate percutaneous cryotherapy as a primary treatment option for high-risk prostate cancer patients. PATIENTS AND METHODS: From October 2000 to February 2005, 21 high-risk (Gleason e8 and/or PSA >; 10 and/or stage >; T2a) prostate cancer patients underwent 24 percutaneous prostate cryoablation procedures. Patients' median age was 70.9, and the average pretreatment PSA was 19.5 ng/dL. The follow-up period ranged from 6 to 60 months (median, 41 months). RESULTS: The PSA failure rate was 39%, 52.9%, and 42.8% at 12, 24, and 60 months of follow-up, respectively. Overall complication rates were low, with 8% of urinary incontinence and no cases of rectal injury; however, 96% of erectile dysfunction occurred. The cryoablation procedure failed in 12 patients (57.2%); 7 (58.3%) of these were local failures (positive prostate biopsies). CONCLUSION: Percutaneous cryoablation of the prostate is a safe minimally invasive treatment, but it has poor PSA-free survival outcomes in high-risk prostate cancer patients.

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Published

2007-01-01

Issue

Section

Clinical Sciences

How to Cite

Percutaneous prostate cryoablation as treatment for high-risk prostate cancer . (2007). Clinics, 62(2), 109-112. https://doi.org/10.1590/S1807-59322007000200003