South Lake County 219.736.7200
North Lake County 219.392.6001
Toll Free 1.888.398.7050
r s s feed icon
Cancer
Resources
Basic InformationMore InformationLatest News
Long-Term Use of Bone Drugs May Be Linked to Esophageal CancerPreventive Surgeries May Be Lifesaver for Women at High Cancer RiskFood Better Than Supplements for Cancer Prevention: ExpertIn Early Trial, Targeted Therapy Fights Advanced MelanomaRectal Cancer on the Increase in Younger PeopleNicotine Can Fuel Breast Cancer, Study SuggestsVitamin D May Influence Genes for Cancer, Autoimmune DiseaseAlcohol May Raise Risk for Certain Breast CancersInner Workings of Gene Tied to Breast, Ovarian Cancer RevealedVirtual Colonoscopy Can Spot Cancers Outside ColonPalliative Care May Boost Mood, SurvivalCancer Care Differs by Race, Language, and Health StatusNovel Ovarian Cancer Test Shows PromisePatient Role in Cancer Treatment Decisions VariesEstrogen Alone Does Not Increase Lung Cancer RiskMass Spectrometer Test IDs Cancer With High AccuracyDocs Shying Away From Drug That May Prevent Prostate CancerLess May Be More When Treating Early Hodgkin'sRecession Causing Cancer Patients to Quit Life-Extending DrugsGene Variants, High BMI Linked to Prostate Cancer MortalityA New Marker to Spot Aggressive Breast Cancers?Hormone Combination Effective in Metastatic Breast CancerHealth Tip: Screening Early for Colorectal CancerBladder Cancer Linked to Compounds in Processed MeatVaccine Shows Some Promise Against Advanced CancersBreast Cancer's DNA Yields More SecretsVaccine Boosts Survival for Men With Advanced Prostate Cancer: StudyGenetics-Based Risk Score Tied to Risk for Breast CancerMany With Low-Risk Prostate Cancer Get Aggressive TherapyChildhood Cancer May Be Linked to Later Heart ProblemsMultiple Genetic Variants Add to Prostate Cancer RiskFDA Panel Advises Against Bevacizumab for Breast CancerAvastin Largely Safe for Patients With Type of Advanced Lung CancerStudy Suggests Painters Face Increased Risk of Bladder CancerSix-Gene Signature May Predict Pancreatic Cancer PrognosisCigarette Smoke May Up Cancer Risk By Interfering With GenesStudy Suggests Higher Cancer Rate Among IVF BabiesNew Clues to How Cancer Patients' Genes Influence TreatmentTelecare Management Lowers Pain, Depression in CancerExperts Issue New Guidelines on Breast Cancer DrugsPersonal, Substantial Diagnosis Talk Preferred by PatientsStudy Suggests Link Between HPV, Skin CancerFish Oil Usage Linked to Lower Risk of Certain Breast CancersU.S. Cancer Death Rate Keeps Falling: ReportMany Docs Deliver Cancer Diagnosis Badly: StudyCould Hot Weather Affect Results of a Colorectal Cancer Test?CDC: U.S. Colorectal Cancer Screening Rates UpShorter Telomere Length Again Linked to CancerBreast Cancer Gene May Raise Men's Risk, TooBlack Cancer Patients Twice as Likely to Die From Disease
LinksBook Reviews
Related Topics

Medical Disorders
Pain Management

Doctor's Specialty Often Steers Prostate Cancer Care

HealthDay News
by -- Robert Preidt
Updated: Mar 9th 2010

new article illustration

TUESDAY, March 9 (HealthDay News) -- The kind of treatment received by a prostate cancer patient often depends on the type of specialist providing the patient's care, new research shows.

U.S. researchers analyzed data on more than 85,000 Medicare beneficiaries aged 65 and older who were diagnosed with prostate cancer between 1994 and 2002. Of those patients, 50 percent were seen only by urologists, 44 percent by urologists and radiation oncologists, 3 percent by urologists and medical oncologists, and 3 percent by all three specialists.

Within nine months after diagnosis, 21 percent of patients had surgery to remove the prostate and surrounding tissue (radical prostatectomy), 42 percent had received radiation therapy, 17 percent underwent a hormone therapy called primary androgen deprivation and 20 percent chose no treatment ("watchful waiting"), according to the report published in the March 8 issue of the journal Archives of Internal Medicine.

The researchers found a strong association between the type of treatment and the type of specialist consulted, according to a news release from the journal's publisher.

Radical prostatectomy was the most common type of treatment in patients aged 65 to 74 seen only by a urologist (34 percent of these men). Radiation therapy was the most common treatment for patients of all ages seen by both urologists and radiation oncologists. Primary androgen deprivation or watchful waiting were most common among patients seen by urologists (with or without medical oncologists) than among patients seen by urologists and radiation oncologists.

"Our findings provide new insight into the relationship between physician visit patterns and receipt of therapy for localized prostate cancer," wrote Dr. Thomas L. Jang and colleagues. "The pattern of specialist visits and treatment that we observed suggests that [physician] preferences may be affecting treatment decisions of Medicare patients."

The study authors concluded: "This finding and the known preferences of prostate cancer specialists for the treatment they themselves deliver underscores the need to ensure that all men are well informed and have access to balanced information prior to making this important treatment decision."

More information

The U.S. National Cancer Institute has more about prostate cancer treatment.

Strawhun Center

8555 Taft Street
Merrillville, IN 46410-6199
219.769.4005
info@regionalmental
health.org

Stark Center

3903 Indianapolis Blvd.
East Chicago, IN 46312
219.398-7050
info@regionalmental
health.org

Child and Adolescent
Program

1409 E. 84th Place
Merrillville, IN 46410
219.794.2000

5900 Hohman Avenue
Hammond, IN 46410
219.391-0427

Outpatient Services:

290-A East 90th Drive
Merrillville, IN 46410
219.736.9115

2490 Central Avenue
Lake Station, IN 46405
219.962.4040

3903 Indianapolis Blvd.
East Chicago, IN 46312
219.392-6072

2600 Highway Avenue
Highland, IN 46323
219.972-0131


powered by centersite dot net