
“It's just working together as a team to recognize that this needs to be an ongoing active conversation about achieving autonomy in the operating room,” says Kate H. Kraft, MD.

“It's just working together as a team to recognize that this needs to be an ongoing active conversation about achieving autonomy in the operating room,” says Kate H. Kraft, MD.

“This study really showed that we went now beyond 2 years for radiographic progression-free survival, which is the longest we've ever seen in the first-line setting,” says Fred Saad, MD, FRCS.

“The complete response rates were 49%, which is quite impressive compared to historical controls,” says Shilpa Gupta, MD.

“We found in this study that the exercise group had lower prostate cancer-specific anxiety compared to the group that didn't exercise,” says Kerry Courneya, PhD.

"Viagra has revolutionized the field of sexual medicine and impacted how we go about therapies," says Arthur L. Burnett, MD, MBA, FACS.

Drs MacDiarmid and Rogers discuss treatment for OAB and the use of care pathways to treat patients.

Dr Alex Rogers and Dr Scott MacDiarmid discuss overactive bladder (OAB) prevalence and diagnosis and its impact on quality of life.

“If you're going to be embarking upon triplet based therapy, as Arasens has now clearly demonstrated the potential advantage, having really healthy and productive and efficient conversations with your integrated cancer care team is paramount,” says Neal D. Shore, MD, FACS.

“Multidisciplinary discussion is best,” says Shawn Dason, MD, FRCSC.

“IsoPSA is a way of measuring all the different PSA-related proteins in the blood,” says Eric A. Klein, MD.

“Those that did complete the surveys generally reported average improvements in bone-metastasis-related pain and ability to function despite that pain,” says Brian D. Gonzalez, PhD.

Welcome to another installment of Uranimals, a video series featuring urologists and their pets, brought to you by Urology Times. From a trio of doodles to a miniature poodle, let’s see who some of the top medical professionals are spending time with when they’re not in the clinic!

Vivek K. Narayan, MD, MS, shares thoughts on approaching treatment selection of mCSPC and Ashley E. Ross, MD, PhD, comments on the use of relugolix in patients.

Bobby Liaw, MD, reviews the study design and results of the phase 3 ENZAMET study and discusses an ongoing trial in mCSPC, ARASENS.

Ashley E. Ross, MD, PhD, reviews data and study results from the phase 3 TITAN and phase 3 ARCHES trial in mCSPC.

“The prevalence of incontinence is high and increasing. We recommend routine screening for all women for this condition as a part of preventive health care,” says Ushma J. Patel, MD.

“Women often are afraid to ask for what they want because they don't want to be perceived as too aggressive or too bossy,” says Kate H. Kraft, MD.

“IsoPSA is intended to be used in men over 50 who are being screened for prostate cancer as a way of helping to decide whether or not a biopsy should be done,” says Eric A. Klein, MD.

In this video, Ryan J. Nelson, DO, and Steven Ogilvy, PA-C, demonstrate the retroperitoneal single-port robotic surgical technique for a kidney tumor.

“I think the notable finding is the fact that the overall detection rate is very high, even at low PSA levels,” says David M. Schuster, MD, FACR.

“I do think that this helps inform how to choose an agent for this specific stage of the disease,” says Benjamin Lowentritt, MD, FACS.

“I think this data are very compelling,” says Neal D. Shore, MD, FACS.

"Intermittent catheterization is an important concept in urology, and it has a long history," says John Stoffel, MD.

Types of patients with muscle invasive bladder cancer who may be candidates for a watch-and-wait approach.

The role of adjuvant therapy in nonmetastatic muscle invasive bladder cancer, and an overview of promising novel therapies in the treatment pipeline.

“We found that while the NCCN guideline for Lynch syndrome is highly specific in identifying patients with Lynch syndrome, it missed about 50% of patients with upper tract cancer who had Lynch syndrome,” says Hong Truong, MD.

“This is one of the first large-scale, and by that, I mean a national-based study throughout the United States, with geographical diversity of community-based urology practices that had a pretty sophisticated background of advanced prostate cancer care,” says Neal D. Shore, MD, FACS.

“These are consistent results that continue to demonstrate a disease-free survival benefit of pembrolizumab adjuvant versus placebo,” says Toni K. Choueiri, MD.

“I do think that this helps inform how to choose an agent for this specific stage of the disease,” says Benjamin Lowentritt, MD, FACS.

“I think, in general, patients with hereditary upper tract cancer may be under-recognized and under-referred for genetic evaluation,” says Hong Truong, MD.