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The therapeutic revolution that began in 1997 when the first phosphodiesterase type-5 inhibitor was approved for erectile dysfunction is poised to expand. ED is just the first, most obvious use for PDE-5 inhibitors, said Culley Carson, MD, of the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill.

The launch of two targeted therapies in the past 15 months dramatically changed the landscape for renal cell carcinoma, improving the prospects for patients with this deadliest of urologic cancers. The advances in medical treatment for metastatic RCC are not over, however, as two additional targeted therapies have shown great promise in clinical trials and may soon earn FDA approval.

Fears that testosterone replacement therapy may induce or promote prostate cancer are overblown, according to one leading urologist. The reality is that TRT can be a safe and effective treatment for hypogonadal men.

Medical therapy has a long history as a first-line treatment for men with lower urinary tract symptoms, and recent data have brought into focus which drugs work best for which men, according to Claus G. Roehrborn, MD, of the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center in Dallas. Combination therapy-not necessarily the combination that urologists are most familiar with-also plays an important role.

With seven approved drugs for overactive bladder already on the market, the potential for new treatments might seem to be limited. The reality is that OAB treatment is still not optimal.

Urologists currently have several minimally invasive surgical therapies (MIST) for the treatment of BPH, but each has advantages and disadvantages that must be considered before initiating treatment. Newer MIST modalities tend to fall somewhere between the old standby of transurethral resection of the prostate and medical therapy, according to presenter Kevin T. McVary, MD, of the Feinberg School of Medicine, Northwestern University, Chicago.

Antimuscarinic agents are the primary pharmacologic therapies for overactive bladder, and their ranks continue to grow. The agents in this class-oxybutynin (Ditropan), tolterodine (Detrol), trospium (Sanctura), solifenacin (Vesicare), and darifenacin (Enablex)-are similar in efficacy and side effects, but not identical.

Mounting evidence suggests that finasteride (Proscar) can prevent the clinical manifestation of prostate cancer. Whether eligible men should receive the drug routinely must be an individualized decision, said Eric Klein, MD, of the Cleveland Clinic Lerner College of Medicine.

Surgery sans scars is the potential promise of a new technique under development by a collaboration of physicians at University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, Dallas, and engineers at University of Texas Arlington.

Inflammation may strongly affect metastasis of prostate cancer, according to researchers from the University of California, San Diego. Their findings may result in development of new drugs to block prostate cancer metastasis.

Patients with prostate cancer who are being treated with androgen deprivation therapy (ADT) have three times the risk of periodontal disease as do patients who are not taking the therapy, according to a study published recently in the Journal of Urology (2007; 177:921-4).

Weekly oral treatment with the bisphosphonate alendronate (Fosamax) may prevent bone loss and bone turnover resulting from androgen deprivation therapy (ADT) in men with prostate cancer, researchers from the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center report.

Among women with stress incontinence and no signs of detrusor overactivity, there exists a significant subgroup with low voided volumes, high incidences of urgency and urge-related leaks, and relatively severe symptoms that can only be identified through careful evaluation.

Dorsal genital nerve stimulation using a minimally invasive, pre-pubic approach appears to reduce the symptoms of overactive bladder and is well tolerated by patients, according to results of a prospective, multicenter feasibility study.

In a study designed to uncover patterns of synthetic mesh use, researchers found that those doctors who are most likely to use mesh are male surgeons, those in private practices, and those who did not undergo fellowship training.