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Surgery techniques have improved since the study began, and nerve-sparing approaches to minimize side effects are more common now.
The study "has provided important evidence that effective treatment is both necessary and possible for many men with early-stage prostate cancer," Dr. Matthew R. Smith of Massachusetts General Hospital wrote in an editorial in the journal.
But whether surgery benefits men with early cancers detected through PSA tests rather than symptoms remains to be seen, he added.
Two studies, one in the United States and one in the United Kingdom, are looking at this now, and include other options besides surgery, he notes.
About half of the 218,000 men diagnosed in the United States each year with prostate cancer have early, low-risk disease, and most choose to treat it right away with surgery, radiation or hormones. In Europe, most choose monitoring and treatment only if it gets worse.
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Online:
Prostate cancer info:
http://www.cancer.gov/cancertopics/types/prostate
and http://tinyurl.com/ASCOanswers
Risk calculator: http://tinyurl.com/riskcalculator
New England Journal: http://www.nejm.org/
[Associated
Press;
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