SPOTLIGHT -
Desert Harmony: Urological Associates of Southern Arizona Strives for Collaborative Cancer Care
At Urological Associates of Southern Arizona, "collaboration" is not just a buzzword, it's part and parcel of the daily practice.
IPCC Case-Based Discussion: How Should We Sequence Therapy?
Three case studies focused on how best to sequence therapy in prostate cancer were presented by Daniel P. Petrylak, MD, and discussed by a panel that included Robert Dreicer, MD, and Oliver Sartor, MD.
Maximum 12-Month Follow-Up Suffices in More than Half of Men with Surgically-Treated Invasive Penile Cancer
In men with primary squamous cell carcinoma of the penis who have undergone surgery that removed all glanular epithelium a maximum 12-month follow-up period is recommended.
The Importance of Correct Coding in Specialty-Focused Cancer Treatment Centers
When you consider how complex the system is, and how little training physicians get in medical school about coding, it stands to reason that practice leadership must emphasize its importance.
New Therapies for Prostate Cancer: The Practicalities
Now, with four new agents approved in the last two years and two promising agents in the pipeline, therapy selection and potential outcomes are changing.
5-alpha Reductase Inhibitors Help Prostate Cancer Patients on Active Surveillance
Men with low-risk prostate cancer who have opted for active surveillance are about half as likely to experience pathologic progression or abandon active surveillance if they take a 5-ARI.
A Word of Welcome
It is with great pleasure that I welcome you to the inaugural issue of Urologists in Cancer Care.
Up-Front Osimertinib Provides Comparable OS, Improved Brain PFS Vs Sequential Gefitinib/Osimertinib in EGFR+ NSCLC
Dr Nasioudis on the Use of NGS to Identify the Molecular Profile of Endometroid Ovarian Cancer
Dr Buckingham on the Use of Patient-reported Outcomes to Predict Frailty in Patients With Ovarian Cancer
Dr Slomovitz on the Investigation of Letrozole Plus Ribociclib in Low-Grade Serous Ovarian Carcinoma