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Dive into the research topics where Joanne Waldstreicher is active.

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Featured researches published by Joanne Waldstreicher.


The New England Journal of Medicine | 1998

The effect of finasteride on the risk of acute urinary retention and the need for surgical treatment among men with benign prostatic hyperplasia

John D. McConnell; Reginald C. Bruskewitz; Patrick C. Walsh; Gerald L. Andriole; Michael M. Lieber; H. Logan Holtgrewe; Peter C. Albertsen; Claus G. Roehrborn; J. Curtis Nickel; Daniel Z. Wang; Alice Taylor; Joanne Waldstreicher

Background Finasteride is known to improve urinary symptoms in men with benign prostatic hyperplasia, but the extent to which the benefit is sustained and whether finasteride reduces the incidence of related events, including the need for surgery and the development of acute urinary retention, are not known. Methods In this double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled trial, we studied 3040 men with moderate-to-severe urinary symptoms and enlarged prostate glands who were treated daily with 5 mg of finasteride or placebo for four years. Symptom scores (on a scale of 1 to 34), urinary flow rates, and the occurrence of outcome events were assessed every four months in 3016 men. Prostate volume was measured in a subgroup of the men. Complete data on outcomes were available for 2760 men. Results During the four-year study period, 152 of the 1503 men in the placebo group (10 percent) and 69 of the 1513 men in the finasteride group (5 percent) underwent surgery for benign prostatic hyperplasia (reduction in risk with finasteride, 55 percent; 95 percent confidence interval, 41 to 65 percent). Acute urinary retention developed in 99 men (7 percent) in the placebo group and 42 men (3 percent) in the finasteride group (reduction in risk with finasteride, 57 percent; 95 percent confidence interval, 40 to 69 percent). Among the men who completed the study, the mean decreases in the symptom score were 3.3 in the finasteride group and 1.3 in the placebo group (P<0.001). Treatment with finasteride also significantly improved urinary flow rates and reduced prostate volume (P<0.001). Conclusions Among men with symptoms of urinary obstruction and prostatic enlargement, treatment with finasteride for four years reduces symptoms and prostate volume, increases the urinary flow rate, and reduces the probability of surgery and acute urinary retention.


Urology | 1999

Serum prostate-specific antigen concentration is a powerful predictor of acute urinary retention and need for surgery in men with clinical benign prostatic hyperplasia

Claus G. Roehrborn; John D. McConnell; Michael M. Lieber; Steven A. Kaplan; Jack Geller; Gholem H. Malek; Ronald Castellanos; Scott K. Coffield; Brian Saltzman; Martin I. Resnick; Thomas J. Cook; Joanne Waldstreicher

OBJECTIVES Prostate-specific antigen (PSA) is produced exclusively in the prostate gland and is currently the most useful clinical marker for the detection of prostate cancer. In this report, we examine whether serum PSA is also a predictor of important benign prostatic hyperplasia (BPH)-related outcomes, acute urinary retention (AUR), and the need for BPH-related surgery. METHODS Three thousand forty men were treated with either placebo or finasteride in a double-blind, randomized study of 4-year duration. Serum PSA was measured at baseline, and baseline prostate volume was measured in a 10% subset of 312 men. Probabilities and cumulative incidences of AUR and BPH-related surgery, as well as reduction in risk of events with finasteride, were calculated for the entire patient population, stratified by treatment assignment, baseline serum PSA, and prostate volume. RESULTS The risk of either needing BPH-related surgery or developing AUR ranged from 8.9% to 22.0% during the 4 years in placebo-treated patients stratified by increasing prostate volume and from 7.8% to 19.9% when stratified by increasing serum PSA. In comparison with symptom scores, flow rates, and residual urine volume, receiver operating characteristic curve analyses showed that serum PSA and prostate volume were the most powerful predictors of spontaneous AUR in placebo-treated patients (area under the curve 0.70 and 0.81, respectively). Finasteride treatment reduced the relative risk of needing surgery or developing AUR by 50% to 74% and by 43% to 60% when stratified by increasing prostate volume and serum PSA, respectively. CONCLUSIONS Serum PSA and prostate volume are powerful predictors of the risk of AUR and the need for BPH-related surgery in men with BPH. Knowledge of baseline serum PSA and/or prostate volume are useful tools to aid physicians and decision makers in predicting the risk of BPH-related outcomes and choosing therapy for BPH.


Urology | 1999

Serum prostate-specific antigen as a predictor of prostate volume in men with benign prostatic hyperplasia

Claus G. Roehrborn; Peter Boyle; A. Lawrence Gould; Joanne Waldstreicher

OBJECTIVES To assess the utility of prostate-specific antigen (PSA) as a predictor of prostate volume by characterizing the relationship between prostate volume and serum PSA in men with symptomatic benign prostatic hyperplasia (BPH) and no evidence of prostate cancer, stratified by decade of life. METHODS Placebo-controlled multicenter trials in patients with BPH and a safety study in normal young men provided baseline measurements of serum PSA and prostate volume. The analyses included patients with a baseline prostate volume measured by either transrectal ultrasound (TRUS) or magnetic resonance imaging and baseline serum PSA. A common central laboratory was used for all but one of the individual studies; both laboratories used the Hybritech method. Patients 80 years of age or older were excluded. Patients with a baseline serum PSA greater than 10 ng/mL were excluded to reduce the likelihood of including occult prostate cancer cases. The patients in the BPH trials were screened at baseline by digital rectal examination (DRE) and serum PSA. Those with suspicious findings underwent TRUS-guided biopsy; only patients with negative biopsies are included in these analyses. RESULTS The analyses included 4627 patients, 4448 from the BPH trials and 179 from the safety study. The men in the BPH trials were older (mean age+SE, 63.7+0.10 years) than the men in the safety study (mean age + SE, 30.8+/-0.43), had larger prostates (mean volume+/-SE, 43.7+/-0.38 mL versus 26.3+/-0.49 mL in the safety study), and had higher serum PSA values (mean+/-SE, 2.6+/-0.03 ng/mL versus 0.7+/-0.39 ng/mL in the safety study). The relationship between prostate volume and serum PSA was evaluated using only the BPH trial data. Prostate volume and serum PSA have an age-dependent log-linear relationship (ie, their logarithms are linearly related, and the parameters of the relationship depend on age). Older men tend to have a steeper rate of increase in prostate volume with increasing serum PSA (P < 0.00 for differences between slopes), and there was a slight tendency for PSA density to increase with age. Receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curves were constructed to evaluate the ability of serum PSA to predict threshold prostate sizes in men with BPH. The ROC curve analyses revealed that PSA had good predictive value for assessing prostate volume, with areas under the curve ranging from 0.76 to 0.78 for various prostate volume cutoff points (30, 40, and 50 mL). Conclusions. Prostate volume is strongly related to serum PSA in men with BPH and no evidence of prostate cancer, and the relationship depends on age. Since treatment outcome or risk of long-term complications depend on baseline prostate volume, serum PSA can estimate the degree of prostate enlargement sufficiently accurately to be useful for therapeutic decision making. To achieve a specificity of 70% while maintaining a sensitivity between 65% and 70%, approximate age-specific criteria for detecting men with prostate glands exceeding 40 mL are PSA > 1.6 ng/mL, >2.0 ng/mL, and >2.3 ng/mL for men with BPH in their 50s, 60s, and 70s, respectively.


The Journal of Urology | 2000

SERUM PROSTATE SPECIFIC ANTIGEN IS A STRONG PREDICTOR OF FUTURE PROSTATE GROWTH IN MEN WITH BENIGN PROSTATIC HYPERPLASIA

Claus G. Roehrborn; John D. McConnell; Jaime Bonilla; Sidney Rosenblatt; Perry B. Hudson; Gholem H. Malek; Paul F. Schellhammer; Reginald C. Bruskewitz; Alvin M. Matsumoto; Lloyd H. Harrison; Harold A. Fuselier; Patrick C. Walsh; Johnny B. Roy; Gerald L. Andriole; Martin I. Resnick; Joanne Waldstreicher

PURPOSE We analyze patterns of prostate growth in men diagnosed with benign prostatic hyperplasia (BPH) and treated with placebo during 4 years, and determine which baseline parameters were the strongest predictors of growth. MATERIALS AND METHODS A total of 3,040 men were enrolled in the 4-year randomized, placebo controlled Proscar Long-Term Efficacy and Safety study. Of these men a subgroup of 10% underwent pelvic magnetic resonance imaging prostate volume measurement at baseline and yearly thereafter. Absolute and percent volume changes during 4 years were calculated in the 164 placebo treated men in the subgroup. The ability of age, baseline prostate volume and prostate specific antigen (PSA) to predict prostate growth in placebo treated patients was assessed by multiple linear regression analyses, receiver operator characteristics curves, and evaluations of growth stratified by tertiles of baseline serum PSA and decades of life. RESULTS In placebo treated patients a steady increase in mean plus or minus standard deviation prostate volume from year to year was noted (2.5+/-6.1, 4.9+/-6.8, 6.4+/-8.5 and 7.2+/-8.8 ml. at years 1, 2, 3 and 4, respectively). Mean volume changes at 4 years ranged from -9 to +30 ml. Mean percent change from baseline ranged from 12.5% to 16.6% for men 50 to 59 years old to those 70 to 79 years old. Baseline serum PSA was a strong predictor of growth with 7.4% to 22.0% change at 4 years from the lowest to highest PSA tertiles. Annualized growth rates from baseline were 0.7 ml. per year for PSA 0.2 to 1.3, 2.1 for PSA 1.4 to 3.2 and 3.3 for PSA 3.3 to 9.9 ng./ml. Multiple linear regression analysis showed that serum PSA was a stronger predictor of prostate growth than age or baseline prostate volume. All but 1 man with baseline serum PSA greater than 2.0 ng./ml. had prostate growth during 4 years, and 32.6% of men with serum PSA less than 2.0 exhibited a decrease in volume. CONCLUSIONS Serum PSA is a stronger predictor of growth of the prostate in placebo treated patients than age or baseline prostate volume. Since prostate volume is a risk factor for acute urinary retention and the need for BPH related surgery, the ability of PSA to predict prostate growth may be an important factor when considering individual treatment options for BPH. Such use of PSA represents a shift in paradigm away from focusing solely on symptoms of BPH toward a more comprehensive approach with consideration of predicting and preventing risk factors of BPH related outcomes.


Urology | 1999

Serum prostate-specific antigen and prostate volume predict long-term changes in symptoms and flow rate: results of a four-year, randomized trial comparing finasteride versus placebo ☆

Claus G. Roehrborn; Peter Boyle; Donald Bergner; Todd Gray; Marc Gittelman; Thomas Shown; Arnold Melman; R. Bruce Bracken; Ralph W. deVere White; Alice Taylor; Daniel Wang; Joanne Waldstreicher

OBJECTIVES To determine whether baseline prostate-specific antigen (PSA), in addition to prostate volume, is associated with long-term changes in symptoms and urinary flow rate. METHODS Three thousand forty men with benign prostatic hyperplasia enrolled in the PLESS trial were randomly assigned to finasteride 5 mg or placebo for 4 years. Symptoms and flow rate were assessed every 4 months, and data were analyzed by dividing the patients into three groups by baseline PSA tertiles (0 to 1.3, 1.4 to 3.2, and 3.3 ng/mL or greater) and baseline prostate volume tertiles (14 to 41, 42 to 57, and 58 to 1 50 mL). RESULTS After the initial placebo effect, a slow deterioration in symptoms over time was observed in the placebo-treated men with a baseline PSA 1.4 ng/mL or greater. However, placebo-treated men in the lowest PSA tertile (less than 1.4 ng/mL) had sustained symptomatic improvement that was not seen in placebo-treated men in the higher tertiles (P<0.001). In all finasteride-treated groups, there was initial improvement followed by maintenance or continued symptom improvement over time (approximately 3 to 3.5 points by the end of 4 years). The differences in symptom score improvement between placebo and finasteride were marginal for men with baseline PSA levels less than 1.4 ng/mL (P = 0.128) but were highly significant for men with PSA levels 1.4 ng/mL or greater (P<0.001). Urinary flow rate results were similar to those observed for symptoms. Analysis of symptom and flow rate data by prostate volume tertiles in a 10% subset of men yielded similar results, namely a deterioration of symptoms and flow rate in the two higher tertiles treated with placebo (greater than 41 mL) and a sustained improvement in all three groups of finasteride-treated patients. CONCLUSIONS Baseline PSA and prostate volume are good predictors of long-term symptomatic and flow rate changes. Baseline PSA levels of 1.4 ng/mL or greater and enlarged prostate glands predict the best long-term response to finasteride compared with placebo.


Urology | 1999

Treatment with finasteride preserves usefulness of prostate-specific antigen in the detection of prostate cancer: results of a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled clinical trial

Gerald L. Andriole; Harry A. Guess; Jonathan I. Epstein; H. Wise; Dov Kadmon; E. D. Crawford; Perry B. Hudson; C. L. Jackson; Nicholas A. Romas; L. Patterson; Thomas J. Cook; Joanne Waldstreicher

OBJECTIVES To evaluate prostate cancer detection and prostate-specific antigen (PSA) among men with benign prostatic hyperplasia treated with finasteride. METHODS Three thousand forty men 45 to 78 years of age with PSA less than 10 ng/mL and no history of prostate cancer were randomized in a double-blind, placebo-controlled trial to finasteride (n = 1524) or placebo (n = 1516) for up to 4 years. A prerandomization biopsy negative for prostate cancer was obtained in 98% of patients with a screening PSA of 4.0 ng/mL or more, and an end-of-study biopsy was requested of all such patients without a recent second negative biopsy or a prostate cancer diagnosis. RESULTS Overall, 644 patients (21%) underwent biopsy and 201 (6.6%) underwent transurethral resection of the prostate. Prostate cancer was diagnosed in 4.7% of men on finasteride and 5.1% on placebo (P = 0.7). Elevated PSA prompted diagnosis in 35% of cases on finasteride and 34% on placebo. The area under the receiver operating characteristic curve for last PSA was 0.84 on finasteride and 0.79 on placebo (P = 0.07). Use of an upper limit of normal for last PSA of 2.0 ng/mL for finasteride and 4.0 ng/mL for placebo yielded similar sensitivity (66% versus 70%, P = 0.6), higher specificity (82% versus 74%, P < 0.0001), and a higher likelihood ratio (3.6 versus 2.7, P < 0.05) for finasteride than for placebo. CONCLUSIONS In men treated with finasteride, multiplying PSA by 2 and using normal ranges for untreated men preserves the usefulness of PSA for prostate cancer detection.


Journal of The American Academy of Dermatology | 1999

Finasteride in the treatment of men with frontal male pattern hair loss

James Leyden; Frank Dunlap; Bruce Miller; Peter Winters; Mark Lebwohl; David Hecker; Stephen Kraus; Hilary E. Baldwin; Alan R. Shalita; Zoe Diana Draelos; Michael Markou; Diane Thiboutot; Marvin Rapaport; Sewon Kang; Timothy Kelly; David M. Pariser; Guy F. Webster; Maria K. Hordinsky; Robert L. Rietschel; H.Irving Katz; Lisa Terranella; Sharon Best; Elizabeth Round; Joanne Waldstreicher

BACKGROUND Finasteride, a specific inhibitor of type II 5alpha-reductase, decreases serum and scalp dihydrotestosterone and has been shown to be effective in men with vertex male pattern hair loss. OBJECTIVE This study evaluated the efficacy of finasteride 1 mg/day in men with frontal (anterior/mid) scalp hair thinning. METHODS This was a 1-year, double-blind, placebo-controlled study followed by a 1-year open extension. Efficacy was assessed by hair counts (1 cm2 circular area), patient and investigator assessments, and global photographic review. RESULTS There was a significant increase in hair count in the frontal scalp of finasteride-treated patients (P < .001), as well as significant improvements in patient, investigator, and global photographic assessments. Efficacy was maintained or improved throughout the second year of the study. Finasteride was generally well tolerated. CONCLUSION In men with hair loss in the anterior/mid area of the scalp, finasteride 1 mg/day slowed hair loss and increased hair growth.


European Urology | 2000

Prostate Volume and Serum Prostate–Specific Antigen as Predictors of Acute Urinary Retention

M.J. Marberger; J.T. Andersen; J.C. Nickel; M.-P. Malice; M. Gabriel; F. Pappas; A. Meehan; Elizabeth Stoner; Joanne Waldstreicher

Objectives: We evaluated prostate volume and prostate–specific antigen (PSA) as predictors of acute urinary retention (AUR) in men with benign prostatic enlargement (BPE).Methods: Data were pooled from 3 identical 2–year, multinational, multicenter, non–US, placebo–controlled finasteride trials in 4,222 men with BPE and no evidence of prostate cancer.Results: The 2–year incidence of spontaneous AUR was higher in placebo patients with enlarged prostates (4.2% in men with prostate volume ≥40 ml vs 1.6% in the <40 ml group) and higher PSA levels (3.9% in men with PSA ≥1.4 ng/ml vs. 0.5% in the <1.4 ng/ml group) at baseline. Finasteride reduced AUR incidence by 61% in men with larger prostates, by 63% in men with higher PSA levels, and by 47% in men with smaller prostates, compared with placebo.Conclusions: BPE patients with larger prostate volumes, higher PSA levels and no evidence of prostate cancer have an increased risk of developing AUR and therefore derive the greatest benefit from the risk reduction seen with finasteride therapy.


Urology | 2003

Incidence and severity of sexual adverse experiences in finasteride and placebo-treated men with benign prostatic hyperplasia.

Hunter Wessells; Johnny B. Roy; John Bannow; John J. Grayhack; Alvin M. Matsumoto; Lisa Tenover; Richard Herlihy; William Fitch; Richard F. Labasky; Stephen Auerbach; Raul O. Parra; Jacob Rajfer; Jennifer Culbertson; Michael W. Lee; Mark A. Bach; Joanne Waldstreicher

OBJECTIVES To evaluate the incidence and resolution of sexual adverse experiences (AEs) in men with benign prostatic hyperplasia treated with finasteride 5 mg compared with placebo. METHODS The Proscar Long-term Efficacy and Safety Study (PLESS) was a 4-year, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial assessing the efficacy and safety of finasteride 5 mg in 3040 men, aged 45 to 78 years, with symptomatic benign prostatic hyperplasia, enlarged prostates, and no evidence of prostate cancer. Patients completed a questionnaire at screening regarding their history of sexual dysfunction. During treatment, spontaneously self-reported sexual AEs were recorded. RESULTS At screening, 46% of patients in each treatment group reported some history of sexual dysfunction. During year 1 of the study, 15% of finasteride-treated patients and 7% of placebo-treated patients had sexual AEs that were considered drug related by the investigator (P <0.001). During years 2 to 4, no between-group difference was noted in the incidence of new sexual AEs (7% in each group). The drug-related sexual AE profile for finasteride was similar for men with or without a history of sexual dysfunction. Sexual AEs resolved while continuing therapy in 12% of finasteride patients and 19% of placebo patients. Only 4% of finasteride and 2% of placebo patients discontinued the study because of sexual AEs. In men who discontinued with a sexual AE, 50% and 41% experienced resolution of their sexual AE after discontinuing finasteride or placebo therapy, respectively. CONCLUSIONS Compared with placebo, men treated with finasteride experienced new drug-related sexual AEs with an increased incidence only during the first year of therapy.


Urology | 1999

Does long-term finasteride therapy affect the histologic features of benign prostatic tissue and prostate cancer on needle biopsy?

X. Yang; Kristen Lecksell; Kerry Short; James E. Gottesman; Lloyd J. Peterson; John Bannow; Paul F. Schellhammer; William P. Fitch; G.Byron Hodge; Raul O. Parra; Stephen Rouse; Joanne Waldstreicher; Jonathan I. Epstein

Abstract Objectives. Finasteride, a common agent used to treat benign prostatic hyperplasia (BPH), inhibits 5-alpha-reductase. Testosterone is converted by 5-alpha-reductase to the more potent dihydrotestosterone, which is the primary androgen in the prostate. Leuprolide is a stronger antiandrogen that is used to downstage prostate cancer before radical prostatectomy. Leuprolide induces marked atrophy of prostate carcinoma cells, which sometimes makes pathologic diagnosis of cancer difficult, although evaluation at radical prostatectomy is easier than at biopsy. It is unknown whether finasteride produces similar changes, which would result in greater diagnostic difficulty because such changes would be seen on biopsy to rule out cancer in men with suspicious clinical findings treated for BPH. The current study investigated the histologic effects of finasteride therapy on human prostate cancer and benign prostatic tissue on needle biopsy. Methods. In blinded manner, we reviewed 53 needle biopsy specimens showing prostate carcinoma (35 treated with finasteride, 18 with placebo). Also reviewed in blinded manner were 50 benign needle biopsy specimens (25 treated with finasteride, 25 with placebo). The Gleason score, number of cores involved, percentage cancer involvement in a core, percentage of atrophic changes in cancer cells, presence of mitoses, blue-tinged mucinous secretions, prominent nucleoli, and high-grade prostatic intraepithelial neoplasia were documented for each case in the cancer group. The percentage of atrophy, basal cell hyperplasia, transitional metaplasia, chronic inflammation, and stromal proliferation was documented for each case in the benign group. Results. No significant histologic differences were present in either the benign or cancer group between cases treated with finasteride and placebo. Conclusions. We conclude that finasteride treatment for BPH does not cause difficulty in the diagnosis of cancer in prostate needle specimens. It is possible that there are severely atrophic areas resulting from finasteride treatment that are undersampled. However, the conclusion that cancer seen on needle biopsy in men treated with finasteride is unaltered and readily identified as cancer remains valid.

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Claus G. Roehrborn

University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center

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Elizabeth Stoner

NewYork–Presbyterian Hospital

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Reginald C. Bruskewitz

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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John D. McConnell

University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center

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Gerald L. Andriole

Washington University in St. Louis

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