New Books About Prostate Cancer
New York, NY (PRWEB) April 27, 2005 — Two new books about prostate cancer, “Dr. Peter Scardino’s Prostate Book: The Complete Guide to Overcoming Prostate Cancer, Prostatitis and BPH” and “Surviving Prostate Cancer Without Surgery: The New Gold Standard Treatment That Can Save Your Life and Lifestyle” are drawing attention to the ongoing medical controversy over what doctors believe to be the best type of treatment for this disease.
With the PSA blood test widely used for screening since the 1990’s, more men are being diagnosed and treated early, with physicians now recommending a variety of curative treatments depending on their particular specialties.
Dr. Peter Scardino, a urologist at Manhattan’s Memorial Sloan-Kettering Medical Center, provides a surgical perspective in “Dr. Peter Scardino’s Prostate Book.” In a recent interview with Michael Milken’s National Prostate Foundation, Dr. Scardino compared the cure rates for the most common types of treatment. “With surgery, three out of four men are totally cured. With radiation, the cure rate is two out of three.” Dr. Scardino also suggests in his book that surgery has a favorable complication rate profile compared even with the more popular non-invasive therapies such as radioactive seed implants, also known as brachytherapy.
The other prostate cancer book, “Surviving Prostate Cancer Without Surgery” was co-written by a radiation oncology team at the Dattoli Cancer Center & Brachytherapy Research Institute in Sarasota, Florida. The group is under the direction of Dr. Michael Dattoli, who specializes in brachytherapy and Intensity Modulated Radiation Therapy (IMRT). Dr. Dattoli stated in a recent press release, “The greater than 10-year disease-free survival rate for patients who have completed our brachytherapy protocol is superior to surgical removal of the prostate, with far less risk of complications such as erectile dysfunction and incontinence. Even higher risk patients [those with high PSA values and high Gleason scores] have enjoyed a greater than 80% survival rate.”
Relying on their own studies and published research data, the two specialisits come to different conclusions when evaluating the pros and cons of the currently available treatment options. Traditionally, urologists were reluctant to refer prostate cancer patients to radiation oncologists because of the technical complexity of radiation procedures and lucrative payments made for radical surgery. But the most recent CMS Medicare statistics indicate that more patients in the over-65 age bracket are choosing brachytherapy rather than surgery. That age group accounts for more than 70% of all prostate cancer patients. In 2001, 49,985 Medicare patients underwent brachytherapy compared to 30,783 patients who had radical prostatectomies.
Peer-reviewed studies by Dr. Scardino and Dr. Dattoli can be obtained on the PubMed Web site: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?db=PubMed&itool=toolbar
“Dr. Peter Scardino’s Prostate Book: The Complete Guide to Overcoming Prostate Cancer, Prostatitis and BPH” by Peter Scardino, Judith Kelman
Hardcover: 496 pages
Pub: Avery (4/7/05)
List Price: $27.95
ISBN: 1583332200
“Surviving Prostate Cancer Without Surgery: The New Gold Standard Treatment That Can Save Your Life and Lifestyle” by Michael Dattoli, Jennifer Cash, Don Kaltenbach
Paperback: 284 pages
Pub: Seneca House / Pathway Books (3/28/05)
List Price: $18.95
ISBN: 0964008882


