What is your approach to a patient with prostate cancer with suspicion of rectal wall invasion but otherwise localized disease?
Would you treat this patient any differently than any other very high risk prostate cancer patient? Are there any additional dose constraints for the rectum that should be taken into account?
Answer from: Radiation Oncologist at Community Practice
My approach in a prostate cancer patient with "suspicious" rectal involvement is to verify, in fact, if he has actual rectal involvement, or not and NOT "suspicious" involvement.
I guess my point is that I WOULD BE VERY hesitant to start RT intervention without verifying if the patie...
Answer from: Radiation Oncologist at Academic Institution
I would recommend 3TmpMRI to better characterize local extent of disease. If the patient has clear T4N0 disease, I'd favor giving this patient and extended course of neoadjuvant ADT 6-9 months with repeat imaging to assess regression. This may be a case where the use of a rectal balloon may be warra...
Comments
Radiation Oncologist at UCF COM Well, said. This case illustrates where the treat...