There are no agreed upon guidelines for placing patients on active surveillance (AS). Therefore, there are no absolute criteria for taking patients off AS and when to recommend treatment. The criteria used to define progression are currently based on prostate specific antigen (PSA) kinetics, biopsy reclassification, and change in clinical stage. Multiple studies have evaluated predictors of progression such as PSA, PSA density (PSAD), prostate volume, core positivity, and visible lesion on multiparametric magnetic resonance imaging (mpMRI). Furthermore, published nomograms designed to predict indolent prostate cancer do not perform well when used to predict progression. Newer biomarkers have also not performed well to predict progression. T...
Context: Active surveillance (AS) is an important strategy to reduce prostate cancer overtreatment. ...
Prostate cancer (PCa) is the most common oncological disease among men. It is important to note that...
BACKGROUND: A significant proportion of screen-detected men with prostate cancer may be overdiagnose...
There are no agreed upon guidelines for placing patients on active surveillance (AS). Therefore, the...
textabstractContext Active surveillance (AS) is an important strategy to reduce prostate cancer over...
Widespread prostate-specific antigen (PSA) -based screening and aggressive treatment of prostate can...
In the past decade active surveillance (AS) of men with localized prostate cancer has become an incr...
Active surveillance (AS) is a management strategy involving close monitoring the course of disease w...
BackgroundA better understanding of the independent predictors of disease progression for prostate c...
Objective To assess the ability of current nomograms to predict disease progression at repeat biopsy...
The natural history of prostate cancer is remarkably heterogeneous and, at this time, not completely...
ContextProstate cancer (PCa) remains an increasingly common malignancy worldwide. The optimal manage...
Active surveillance for early prostate cancer is a policy of close monitoring with radical treatment...
OBJECTIVE: To assess early outcomes since the introduction of an active surveillance (AS) protocol i...
Prostate cancer (PCa) is the most commonly diagnosed cancer in men. The diagnosis is currently based...
Context: Active surveillance (AS) is an important strategy to reduce prostate cancer overtreatment. ...
Prostate cancer (PCa) is the most common oncological disease among men. It is important to note that...
BACKGROUND: A significant proportion of screen-detected men with prostate cancer may be overdiagnose...
There are no agreed upon guidelines for placing patients on active surveillance (AS). Therefore, the...
textabstractContext Active surveillance (AS) is an important strategy to reduce prostate cancer over...
Widespread prostate-specific antigen (PSA) -based screening and aggressive treatment of prostate can...
In the past decade active surveillance (AS) of men with localized prostate cancer has become an incr...
Active surveillance (AS) is a management strategy involving close monitoring the course of disease w...
BackgroundA better understanding of the independent predictors of disease progression for prostate c...
Objective To assess the ability of current nomograms to predict disease progression at repeat biopsy...
The natural history of prostate cancer is remarkably heterogeneous and, at this time, not completely...
ContextProstate cancer (PCa) remains an increasingly common malignancy worldwide. The optimal manage...
Active surveillance for early prostate cancer is a policy of close monitoring with radical treatment...
OBJECTIVE: To assess early outcomes since the introduction of an active surveillance (AS) protocol i...
Prostate cancer (PCa) is the most commonly diagnosed cancer in men. The diagnosis is currently based...
Context: Active surveillance (AS) is an important strategy to reduce prostate cancer overtreatment. ...
Prostate cancer (PCa) is the most common oncological disease among men. It is important to note that...
BACKGROUND: A significant proportion of screen-detected men with prostate cancer may be overdiagnose...