Age plays too big a role in prostate cancer treatment decisions

Age plays too big a role in prostate cancer treatment decisions – Older men with high-risk prostate cancer frequently are offered fewer ? and less effective ? choices of treatment than younger men, potentially resulting in earlier deaths, according to a new UCSF study.

Potential target identified for therapy for prostate cancer

UCLA researchers discover a potential target for therapy for patients with a deadly prostate cancer – A monoclonal antibody targeting a well known cell surface protein inhibited prostate cancer growth and metastasis in an aggressive form of the disease that did not respond to hormone therapy.

Brothers of prostate cancer patients undergo more diagnostic activities

Brothers of prostate cancer patients undergo more diagnostic activities – The brothers of men with prostate cancer are at an increased risk of prostate cancer diagnosis because of increased diagnostic activity and not necessarily because they carry a genetic mutation that increases risk of the disease, according to a study published online August 19 in The Journal of the National Cancer Institute.

Dense bones linked to prostate cancer risk

Dense bones linked to raised risk for prostate cancer – Men who develop prostate cancer, especially the more aggressive and dangerous forms that spread throughout the body, tend to retain denser bones as they age than men who stay free of the disease, suggests new research from Johns Hopkins and the National Institute on Aging (NIA), part of the National Institutes of Health.

Cancer deaths continue to drop in US

Cancer deaths continue to drop in USA – The continued drop in overall cancer mortality rates over the last 20 years has averted more than three-quarters of a million (767,000) cancer deaths according to a new report from the American Cancer Society.

Statins lower prostate cancer recurrence after prostatectomy

Statins associated with lower cancer recurrence following prostatectomy – Men who use statins to lower their cholesterol are 30 percent less likely to see their prostate cancer come back after surgery compared to men who do not use the drugs, according to researchers at Duke University Medical Center. Researchers also found that higher doses of the drugs were associated with lower risk of recurrence.

New PSA test predicts if prostate cancer will return

Nanoparticle PSA test predicts if prostate cancer will return — Ultrasensitive test gives first accurate answer after prostate cancer surgery – New research from Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine and the University International Institute for Nanotechnology shows that an ultrasensitive PSA test using nanoparticle-based technology (VeriSens? PSA, Nanosphere, Inc., research-use-only) may be able to definitively predict after surgery if the cancer is cured long term or if it will recur.

Refusal to prostate cancer surgery may impact survival

Patients who refuse prostate cancer surgery have worse long-term survival – Men who refuse surgery for prostate cancer and instead opt for “watchful waiting” ? monitoring cancer progression without undergoing treatment ? have a significantly worse long-term survival rate than those patients that choose radiotherapy, according to researchers at Henry Ford Hospital in Detroit.

Exercise may keep cancer patients healthier

Exercise may keep cancer patients healthier during, after treatment – Breast and prostate cancer patients who regularly exercise during and after cancer treatment report having a better quality of life and being less fatigued, according to researchers at Henry Ford Hospital in Detroit.

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