A clinical cT3 prostate cancer can mean so many different tumors, that no single approach can actually be proposed. Radical prostatectomy has become standard treatment for T1/T2 tumors, but the surgical treatment for the clinical T3 prostate cancer has always been and remains controversial, although some urologists felt that radical prostatectomy remained a treatment option for T3 prostatic cancer when poor prognosis patients were excluded. The clinical staging of locally confined or locally advanced prostate cancer is not reliable. More than 70% of the clinically T2-tumors are pT3. On the others hand clinically T3-tumors are sometimes overestimated and about 20% of the clinical T3 cancers were shown to be pT2.--At the Department of Urology, University Hospital Gasthuisberg, Katholieke Universiteit Leuven, Belgium--158 patients had radical prostatectomy for clinical stage T3N0M0 prostate cancer. 110 patients were surgically treated only. 30 patients had adjuvant hormone-therapy and were considered to be progressive at 1 month because PSA follow-up is unreliable. 18 other patients were irradiated postoperatively. PSA-free survival rate exceeds 70% at 24 months and the 5 years estimated PSA-free survival is more than 60%. Summarizing radical prostatectomy appears to be a justified treatment modality in pT3-prostate cancer, if PSA is < 10 ng/ml.
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