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The likelihood that an older patient will be hospitalized within a week or die shortly after undergoing prostate resection and other common procedures in an outpatient setting depends on health-related characteristics of the patient and where the surgery was performed, according to a recent article in Archives of Surgery (2004; 139:67-72).

Obese men with prostate cancer are more likely to have aggressive tumors and to experience cancer recurrence after surgery compared with men of normal weight or those who are overweight but not obese, according to two new studies.

It's official. As widely anticipated, the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services announced that the nation's physicians would receive a 1.5% increase in payments for services under the Medicare Physician Fee Schedule in calendar year 2004.

Over the last 20 years, radical retropubic prostatectomy has evolvedto become the standard of care in men with localized prostate cancer. Becauseof the morbidity of this procedure, however, interest has grown in the developmentof non-surgical modalities. Unfortunately, many of these non-surgical approaches,such as monotherapy with radioactive seed implantation, have resulted indisappointing results or excessive morbidity, as in first-generation cryotherapy.

Be prepared for a short-term gain that may be a long-term pain. The AmericanMedical Association has claimed a major political victory with passage ofthe Medicare Prescription Drug Improvement and Modernization Act of 2003,and I certainly hope the AMA is correct. Certainly the pay increase overthe next 2 years is great. However, I have concerns about many of the otherissues addressed in the bill.

Winston-Salem, NC--Well over one-third of men with localized prostatecancer are opting for brachytherapy as their primary treatment, accordingto a recently published study. Past and current data indicate the proportionof prostate cancer patients choosing brachytherapy has grown from 1.4% in1992 to 3.0% in 1995 to 36% in 1999-the latest year for which comprehensivedata are available.

Montreal--Novel approaches to percutaneous nephrolithotomy, includinguse of a stent instead of a tube and using smaller tubes and stone "cones,"are helping to optimize this procedure. Researchers agree that improvingsafety and reducing morbidity are the goals of these new techniques.

Minneapolis--Surgeons and other physicians across the country continueto deal with the higher costs of practicing medicine in the face of decliningreimbursements. Those factors added up to lower profit margins for U.S.physician groups in 2002 and a continuing awareness of the need to pay attentionto all of the vagaries of the business of practicing medicine. For the mostpart, urologists showed little change in reimbursement.

New Products & Services

Waltham, MA-Praecis Pharmaceuticals has received FDA approval to market abarelix (Plenaxis) for men with advanced prostate cancer.

Montreal-High-intensity focused ultrasound (HIFU) continues to show promise for the local treatment of prostate cancer. When initiated early in the disease, the minimally invasive procedure offers good efficacy results with little morbidity, according to several European studies presented at the World Congress on Endourology here.

Chicago--Advances in technology and technique are allowing computed tomography to image lesions and tumors as small as 2 mm in diameter in the kidney, bladder, and urinary tract of high-risk patients, according to a study presented here at the annual meeting of the Radiological Society of North America.

Health and Human Services Secretary Tommy G. Thompson has named Dennis G. Smith as interim head of the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services.

Tom Scully, administrator of the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services, will resign effective Dec. 15, following 3 years at the helm of two of the nation's largest domestic programs.

The FDA has approved what is said to be the first gonadotropin releasing hormone (GnRH) antagonist for prostate cancer available as a depot formulation. Abarelix (Plenaxis) is indicated for the palliative treatment of men with advanced symptomatic prostate cancer, in whom LHRH agonist therapy is not appropriate, who refuse surgical castration, and have one or more of the following: risk of neurologic compromise due to metastases; ureteral or bladder outlet obstruction due to local encroachment or metastatic disease; or severe bone pain from skeletal metastases persisting on narcotic analgesia.

In this month's issue of Urology Times, attention is given to evolvingmethods for treating renal masses in less invasive ways, including laparoscopicnephron-sparing surgery and cryosurgical ablation.