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Facts
- Prostate cancer incidence rates increased 192 percent
between 1973 and 1992.
- In the next 24 hours, prostate cancer will claim the
lives of over 100 American men. (National Prostate Cancer
Coalition)
- In Iowa, prostate cancer is the second leading cause
(29.2 percent) of cancer deaths in males and the leading
type of new cancer (11.5 percent) in males. (State Health
Registry Cancer in Iowa: 2002)
Prostate cancer is the most common form of cancer
affecting men in the Western world. In 2002, the American
Cancer Society projects there will be 189,000 new cases of
prostate cancer (30 percent of all adult male cancers) and
30,200 deaths (11 percent of cancer deaths) from prostate
cancer.
"Prostate cancer is the leading type of cancer in men and
the second leading cause of death in American males," says
Richard Williams, M. D., professor and head of the
University of Iowa Department of Urology.
"The good news is that the incidence rate has decreased
by 5.1 percent and the death rate has decreased by 3.5
percent between 1992 and1998, suggesting that screenings may
work," says Williams.
The prostate is a male sex gland that produces a fluid
that forms part of the semen. About the size of a walnut,
the prostate is located below the bladder and in front of
the rectum.
"Risk factors for prostate cancer include age, race, and
heredity," says Carolyn Beelner, R.N., O.C.N., with the
Holden Comprehensive Cancer Center's Cancer Information
Service. "Simply growing older increases the likelihood of
getting prostate cancer." The fastest growing group of men
diagnosed with prostate cancer is the 50 to 60 age group.
African-American men have the world's highest incidence
of prostate cancer--one-third higher than white Americans.
Asian men have much lower rates.
If three relatives have the disease, you are 10 times
more likely to get prostate cancer. If your father or your
brother has prostate cancer, you are two to three times more
likely to develop prostate cancer.
For more information, contact the Holden Cancer Center
Information Service at 800-237-1225.
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Symptoms
Compared with most cancers, prostate cancer tends to grow
slowly and it may be decades from the time of the earliest
cell changes detected under a microscope until the cancer
causes symptoms. Early prostate cancer often doesn't exhibit
any symptoms so regular examinations are especially
important. When symptoms do occur, they may include:
- Frequent urination
- Difficulty starting for stopping urination
- Inability to urinate
- Weak or interrupted flow of urine
- Painful or burning urination
- Painful ejaculation
- Blood in urine or semen
- Persistent pain in lower back, hips, upper
thighs.
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What's on the horizon?
David Lubaroff, Ph. D., University of Iowa Department of
Urology professor and Holden Comprehensive Cancer Center
researcher; Badrinath Konety, M.D., assistant professor of
urology; Brian Link, M.D., assistant professor of oncology,
and Richard Williams, M.D., head of the Department of
Urology, are leading the nation's first-ever clinical trial
of an adenovirus/prostate specific antigen vaccine,
Currently in phase 1, this vaccine trial shows promise as
one of the new generation of therapies designed to help a
patient's immune system redirect its efforts at fighting
prostate cancer cells, even when those cells have
metastasized throughout the body.
"I have high expectations and every reason to think gains
will be made in this area," said Jack Leonard of Lisbon,
Iowa, one of the phase 1 volunteers. The 68-year-old father
of five was first diagnosed with prostate cancer in 1996 and
has been treated with surgery and hormone therapy, and is
now a pioneer member of the clinical trial.
"If they can hold the cancer in check, or even better,
knock it down, that would be great," says Leonard. "Or
better yet, develop a vaccine to be given at a certain age
and never worry about prostate cancer again."
Prostate Cancer Research Group investigators Tim Ratliff,
Ph.D., Hebbeln Professor of Prostate Cancer Research, and
Tom Griffith, Ph.D., assistant professor of urology, are
developing further prostate cancer vaccines and will begin
additional trials within the next year.
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For More Information
Listed above are several Web sites that offer additional
information on this topic. University of Iowa Health Care
does not sponsor or endorse these sites, or guarantee the
accuracy of the information contained on these sites. These
links are here for general information only, and should not
be used for personal diagnosis or treatment. If you have any
questions, please contact UI
Health Access.
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