Bladder Cancer After Radiotherapy for Prostate Cancer |
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Authors: | Francesca Suriano Emanuela Altobelli Federico Sergi Maurizio Buscarini |
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Affiliation: | Università Campus Bio-Medico di Roma,, Rome, Italy |
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Abstract: | External beam radiotherapy (EBRT) is frequently used in the management of prostate cancer (PCa) as definitive, postoperative, or salvage local treatment. Although EBRT plays a central role in the management of PCa, complications remain a troubling by-product. Several studies have demonstrated an association between radiotherapy and elevated risk of acute and late toxicities. A secondary malignancy induced by initial therapy represents one of the most serious complications related to definitive cancer treatment. The radiation-related secondary primary malignancy risk increases with increasing survival time. Transitional cell carcinoma of the bladder is the most frequent secondary primary malignancy occurring after radiotherapy and is described as more aggressive; it may be diagnosed later because some radiation oncologists believe that the hematuria that occurs after prostate EBRT is normal. Some patients treated for localized PCa will subsequently develop invasive bladder cancer requiring surgical intervention. Patients with PCa treated with EBRT should be monitored closely for the presence of bladder cancer.Key words: Bladder cancer, Prostate cancer, Radiotherapy, External beam radiotherapyThe phenomenon of radiation-inducing the carcinogenesis has been well described in literature for decades. The correlation between ionizing radiation and DNA damage has been discussed in several studies.1–4 Most of these studies evaluated the growth of solid tumors in a large population exposed to moderate to heavy doses of radiation, such as factory workers, patients exposed to a large number of diagnostic radiographic studies, and survivors of atomic and nuclear explosions. 1 The casual effects of radiation exposure with subsequent mutagenesis are quite clear, shown both in vivo and in vitro.2 Previous radiotherapy (RT) for prostate cancer (PCa) may play an important role in the development of secondary primary bladder cancer. This is a fairly uncommon event but a very real entity, of which both urologists and radiation oncologists need to be aware. |
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