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Prostate News Archive

13-Sep-2006

  • How I beat testicular and prostate cancer too (Daily Mail)

    It's an unlikely subject for Martin Clunes' latest sitcom: testicular cancer. Here its scriptwriter reveals how he beat the disease


  • Long-Term Gastrointestinal Side Effects After Radiotherapy For Prostate Cancer Are More Common Than Previously Reported (Medical News Today)

    UroToday.com - External beam radiotherapy (XRT) in commonly employed for the treatment of localized or locally advanced prostate cancer (CaP). Despite advances such as 3-dimensional conformal radiotherapy and intensity-modulated radiotherapy, the bladder and rectum still sustain scatter radiation. Dr. Giordano and colleagues at M.D. [click link for full article]


  • Men Undergoing Radical Prostatectomy For Stage T3 Prostate Cancer Can Experience Good Long-term Outcomes (Medical News Today)

    UroToday.com - Men with clinical stage T3 prostate cancer (CaP) are often found to have locally advanced or regional disease. As such, radiotherapy with androgen deprivation is most commonly employed. Dr. Carver and colleagues at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center reviewed the outcomes of 176 men who had radical prostatectomy (RP) for stage T3 CaP. [click link for full article]


  • Prostate screening offered Sept. 20 (News Democrat & Leader)

    Prostate cancer is a disease that can be life-threatening, but is treatable if detected in the early stages. A free prostate cancer screening will be offered by Logan Memorial Hospital on Wednesday, Sept. 20, from 5:30 until 7:30 p.m.


  • Alternatives to prostate surgery (The Enid News & Eagle)

    As you slide out of bed for your fourth trip to the toilet tonight, you may be ready to do almost anything to get a good night?s sleep. For men with similar night-time symptoms, prostate surgery has for many years offered a tempting solution.


  • Prostate cancer test still not foolproof (St. Petersburg Times)

    prostate cancer is one of the most frequently diagnosed cancers in American men, second only to superficial skin cancer. It is estimated that one in six American men will develop prostate cancer in his lifetime.


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