Cancer of the Prostate Gland
- 4 January 1971
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Medical Association (AMA)
- Vol. 215 (1), 81-84
- https://doi.org/10.1001/jama.1971.03180140045007
Abstract
At the Cancer Detection Center at the University of Minnesota, 5,856 men underwent a total of 28,407 routine annual examinations, which included evaluation by digital palpation of the prostate gland. Seventy-five subsequently confirmed adenocarcinomas of the prostate gland were detected, and the patients with these had an absolute five-year survival rate of 77.3% (58). The absolute ten-year survival rate for 48 of these patients was 44%. Twenty-two patients who underwent curative total prostatectomies could be followed for a least five years. Twenty of the 22 were five-year survivors, for an absolute five-year survival rate of 91%; the age-adjusted rate was 100%. At ten years the absolute survival rate was 69%; and the relative survival rate was observed to have remained at 100%. These results may be compared with those of the End Results Study, which show relative survival rates of 49% at five years, and 29% at ten years.Keywords
This publication has 3 references indexed in Scilit:
- Cancer of the Prostate in Men Less than 50 Years Old: An Analysis of 51 CasesJournal of Urology, 1969
- THE PROSTATIC NODULE: A CHALLENGE AND A PROBLEM*Journal of the American Geriatrics Society, 1968
- The rationale and results of ablative surgery for prostatic cancerCancer, 1963