Posted on 12/04/2019 2:11:10 PM PST by Red Badger
Scientists are reporting promising results from a year-long study where soundwaves were used to heat and destroy prostate cancers decade3d/Depositphotos View 2 Images
Treating prostate cancer through traditional means such as surgery or radiotherapy carries certain risks, with some patients experiencing impotence, urinary problems and bowel trouble, among other unwanted side effects. Safer and less invasive treatment options could soon be on the table, however, including a novel MRI-guided ultrasound technique that eliminated significant cancers in 80 percent of subjects in a year-long study.
The new technique is called MRI-guided transurethral ultrasound ablation (TULSA) and has been under development for a number of years. The minimally invasive technology involves a rod that enters the prostate gland via the urethra and emits highly controlled sound waves in order to heat and destroy diseased tissue, while leaving healthy tissue unharmed.
These waves come from 10 heating elements built into the length of the rod to treat the entire prostate gland. An algorithm controls which of these elements emit the sound waves at any one time, along with their shape, direction and strength. All of this takes place within an MRI scanner, allowing doctors to keep a close eye on which tissues are being heated and by how much.
TULSA uses a rod inserted into the prostate to target diseased tissue with soundwavesRadiological Society of North America
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"Unlike with other ultrasound systems on the market, you can monitor the ultrasound ablation process in real time and get immediate MRI feedback of the thermal dose and efficacy," says study co-auhor Steven S. Raman, M.D., professor of radiology and urology at the University of California at Los Angeles. "It's an outpatient procedure with minimal recovery time."
Raman and his team recently put TULSA to the test in a study involving 115 men with low- or intermediate-risk prostate cancer that was confined to the gland. The TULSA treatment was administered to the whole gland for an average time of 51 minutes, with the cancers then reassessed 12 months later.
These follow-up observations revealed some hugely promising results. Clinically significant cancer was totally eliminated in 80 percent of the subjects a year after the TULSA treatment. Sixty-five percent of the subjects exhibited no evidence of cancer at all in their biopsies, while prostate-specific antigen (PSA), the key biomarker for prostate cancer, was reduced by a median of 95 percent.
No bowel complications were reported, while the group reported low rates of severe toxicity, low rates of impotence and close to no incontinence (involuntary urine loss from the bladder). Additionally, the technique can be used to treat other benign conditions, such as prostate enlargement. On average, prostate volume among the study subjects decreased from 39 cubic centimeters beforehand, to 3.8 cubic centimeters following the treatment.
"There are two very unique things about this system," says Raman. "First, you can control with much more finesse where you're going to treat, preserving continence and sexual function. Second, you can do this for both diffuse and localized prostate cancer and benign diseases, including benign hyperplasia."
The scientists are now working towards further studies to support these exciting results. With TULSA already approved for clinical use in Europe, and having recently received FDA pre-market clearance as safe and effective for prostate treatment in the US, the hope is that it could reach clinical use stateside in the near future.
The scientists presented the research results at this weeks annual meeting of the Radiological Society of North America. An abstract is available online here, while the animation below offers a look at TULSA in action.
And they say ultrasounds are harmless to babies...
This can be used for BPH....sounds good.
So, why is it better than seed implants coupled with external beam radiation?
Different kind and intensity...............
No radiation..................
“Take me back to Tulsa, I'm too young to die...”
And with a 90+% reduction in prostate size, to boot - beats that stuff Joe Theismann pitches all to hell.
This thread needed a (YIKES!) heading. LOL sorta
That stuff never works...................
The technique. I had was HIFU, I am 18 months cancer free. no side affects, everything still works.
It was out patient, I’m left with the left half of the prostate.
“So, why is it better than seed implants coupled with external beam radiation?”
Because it is not radiation.
It IS radiation but not ionizing radiation.
Well that explains why pregnant women almost never get prostate cancer.
It’s like 0.00000000001%....................
I can’t imagine having any sort of hyper-invasive and destructive procedure except possibly under general. Drug-induced amnesia and a little fentanyl isn’t going to cut it for me. But glad you’re doing well!
Wait, how large is that tube? Can I be sedated, heavily?
They knocked me out, in at 6 am, home at 7 pm
I wasn’t doing it awake, the biopsy is bad enough with a local
That’s like comparing a gentle wind to a typhoon.
And I'm the biggest coward on the planet...just ask my family! :-)
I did 5 weeks of radiation treatment followed by the seed implants, the latter being over a year ago. There have been some side effects but I’m glad I didn’t opt for removal surgery. That said I wish this other treatment had been an option.
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