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Dive into the research topics where Robert C. Flanigan is active.

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Featured researches published by Robert C. Flanigan.


The Journal of Urology | 1994

Comparison of Digital Rectal Examination and Serum Prostate Specific Antigen in the Early Detection of Prostate Cancer: Results of a Multicenter Clinical Trial of 6,630 Men

William J. Catalona; Jerome P. Richie; Frederick R. Ahmann; M'Liss A. Hudson; Peter T. Scardino; Robert C. Flanigan; Jean B. deKernion; Timothy L. Ratliff; Louis R. Kavoussi; Bruce L. Dalkin; W. Bedford Waters; Michael T. Macfarlane; Paula C. Southwick

&NA; To compare the efficacy of digital rectal examination and serum prostate specific antigen (PSA) in the early detection of prostate cancer, we conducted a prospective clinical trial at 6 university centers of 6,630 male volunteers 50 years old or older who underwent PSA determination (Hybritech Tandom‐E or Tandem‐R assays) and digital rectal examination. Quadrant biopsies were performed if the PSA level was greater than 4 &mgr;g./l. or digital rectal examination was suspicious, even if transrectal ultrasonography revealed no areas suspicious for cancer. The results showed that 15% of the men had a PSA level of greater than 4 &mgr;g./l., 15% had a suspicious digital rectal examination and 26% had suspicious findings on either or both tests. Of 1,167 biopsies performed cancer was detected in 264. PSA detected significantly more tumors (82%, 216 of 264 cancers) than digital rectal examination (55%, 146 of 264, p = 0.001). The cancer detection rate was 3.2% for digital rectal examination, 4.6% for PSA and 5.8% for the 2 methods combined. Positive predictive value was 32% for PSA and 21% for digital rectal examination. Of 160 patients who underwent radical prostatectomy and pathological staging 114 (71%) had organ confined cancer: PSA detected 85 (75%) and digital rectal examination detected 64 (56%, p = 0.003). Use of the 2 methods in combination increased detection of organ confined disease by 78% (50 of 64 cases) over digital rectal examination alone. If the performance of a biopsy would have required suspicious transrectal ultrasonography findings, nearly 40% of the tumors would have been missed. We conclude that the use of PSA in conjunction with digital rectal examination enhances early prostate cancer detection. Prostatic biopsy should be considered if either the PSA level is greater than 4 &mgr;g./l. or digital rectal examination is suspicious for cancer, even in the absence of abnormal transrectal ultrasonography findings.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2001

T cell infiltration of the prostate induced by androgen withdrawal in patients with prostate cancer

Maria Mercader; Barbara Bodner; Micheal T. Moser; Pamela S. Kwon; Eugene S. Y. Park; Ryan G. Manecke; Thomas M. Ellis; Eva M. Wojcik; Damu Yang; Robert C. Flanigan; W. Bedford Waters; W. Martin Kast; Eugene D. Kwon

Manipulations capable of breaking host tolerance to induce tissue-specific T cell-mediated inflammation are of central importance to tumor immunotherapy and our understanding of autoimmunity. We demonstrate that androgen ablative therapy induces profuse T cell infiltration of benign glands and tumors in human prostates. T cell infiltration is readily apparent after 7–28 days of therapy and is comprised predominantly of a response by CD4+ T cells and comparatively fewer CD8+ T cells. Also, T cells within the treated prostate exhibit restricted TCR Vβ gene usage, consistent with a local oligoclonal response. Recruitment/activation of antigen-presenting cells in treated prostate tissues may contribute to local T cell activation. The induction of T cell infiltration in prostate tissues treated with androgen ablation may have implications for the immunotherapeutic treatment of prostate cancer as well as other hormone-sensitive malignancies, including breast carcinoma.


Urology | 2000

Comparison of percent free PSA, PSA density, and age-specific PSA cutoffs for prostate cancer detection and staging.

William J. Catalona; Paula C. Southwick; Kevin M. Slawin; Alan W. Partin; Michael K. Brawer; Robert C. Flanigan; Anup Patel; Jerome P. Richie; Patrick C. Walsh; Peter T. Scardino; Paul H. Lange; Gail H. Gasior; Kathleen G. Loveland; Kurtis R. Bray

OBJECTIVES Various methods have been proposed to increase the specificity of prostate-specific antigen (PSA), including age-specific PSA reference ranges, PSA density (PSAD), and percent free PSA (%fPSA). In this multicenter study, we compared these methods for their utility in cancer detection and their ability to predict pathologic stage after radical prostatectomy in patients with clinically localized, Stage T1c cancer. METHODS Seven hundred seventy-three men (379 with prostate cancer, 394 with benign prostatic disease), 50 to 75 years old, from seven medical centers were enrolled in this prospective blinded study. All subjects had a palpably benign prostate, PSA 4.0 to 10.0 ng/mL, and a histologically confirmed diagnosis. Hybritechs Tandem PSA and free PSA assays were used. RESULTS %fPSA and age-specific PSA cutoffs enhanced PSA specificity for cancer detection, but %fPSA maintained significantly higher sensitivities. Age-specific PSA cutoffs missed 20% to 60% of cancers in men older than 60 years of age. %fPSA and PSAD performed equally well for detection (95% sensitivity) if cutoffs of 25% fPSA or 0.078 PSAD were used. The commonly used PSAD cutoff of 0.15 detected only 59% of cancers. %fPSA and PSAD also produced similar results for prediction of the post-radical prostatectomy pathologic stage. Patients with cancer with higher %fPSA values (greater than 15%) or lower PSAD values (0.15 or less) tended to have less aggressive disease. CONCLUSIONS The results of this study demonstrated that cancer detection (sensitivity) is significantly higher with %fPSA than with age-specific PSA reference ranges. %fPSA and PSAD provide comparable results, suggesting that %fPSA may be used in place of PSAD for biopsy decisions and in algorithms for prediction of less aggressive tumors since the determination of %fPSA does not require ultrasound.


The Journal of Urology | 1994

Selection of optimal prostate specific antigen cutoffs for early detection of prostate cancer: receiver operating characteristic curves.

William J. Catalona; M'Liss A. Hudson; Peter T. Scardino; Jerome P. Richie; Frederick R. Ahmann; Robert C. Flanigan; Jean B. deKernion; Timothy L. Ratliff; Louis R. Kavoussi; Bruce L. Dalkin; W.B. Waters; Michael T. Macfarlane; Paula C. Southwick

A prospective clinical trial of prostate cancer screening was conducted at 6 university centers including 6,630 men 50 years old or older who underwent a serum prostate specific antigen (PSA) determination and digital rectal examination. Biopsies were performed if the PSA level was greater than 4.0 ng./ml. (Hybritech Tandem assay) or digital rectal examination was suspicious for cancer. We evaluated the effect on biopsy rate and cancer detection if the cutoff value was shifted from 4.0 to age-specific reference ranges recommended in the literature. In men 50 to 59 years old with normal digital rectal examination findings a decrease from 4.0 to 3.5 ng./ml. would have resulted in a 45% increase in the number of biopsies (39 of 87) and a projected 15% increase in cancer detection. An increase from 4.0 to 4.5 ng./ml. in men 60 to 69 years old would result in 15% fewer biopsies (35 of 238) and would miss 8% of the organ confined tumors (2 of 25). Increasing the cutoff to 6.5 ng./ml. in men 70 years old or older would result in 44% fewer biopsies (70 of 159) and would miss 47% of the organ confined cancers (7 of 15). The number of biopsies performed for each cancer detected with a PSA level of greater than 4.0 ng./ml. remains constant across age groupings, which suggests that the cutoff of 4.0 ng./ml. does not need to be altered in the older men, since it is apparently unaffected by the simultaneously increasing prevalence of benign prostatic hyperplasia and cancer with age. We conclude that a serum PSA concentration of 4.0 ng./ml. should be used as a general guideline for biopsy in all age groups.


The Lancet | 2008

An adjuvant autologous therapeutic vaccine (HSPPC-96; vitespen) versus observation alone for patients at high risk of recurrence after nephrectomy for renal cell carcinoma: a multicentre, open-label, randomised phase III trial

Christopher G. Wood; Pramod K. Srivastava; Ronald M. Bukowski; Louis Lacombe; Andrei I Gorelov; Sergei Gorelov; Peter Mulders; Henryk Zielinski; Axel Hoos; Florentina Teofilovici; Leah Isakov; Robert C. Flanigan; Robert A. Figlin; Renu Gupta; Bernard Escudier

BACKGROUND Treatment of localised renal cell carcinoma consists of partial or radical nephrectomy. A substantial proportion of patients are at risk for recurrence because no effective adjuvant therapy exists. We investigated the use of an autologous, tumour-derived heat-shock protein (glycoprotein 96)-peptide complex (HSPPC-96; vitespen) as adjuvant treatment in patients at high risk of recurrence after resection of locally advanced renal cell carcinoma. METHODS In this open-label trial, patients were randomly assigned to receive either vitespen (n=409) or observation alone (n=409) after nephrectomy. Randomisation was done in a one to one ratio by a computer-generated pseudo-random number generator, with a block size of four, and was stratified by performance score, lymph node status, and nuclear grade. Vitespen was given intradermally once a week for 4 weeks, then every 2 weeks until vaccine depletion. The primary endpoint was recurrence-free survival. The final analysis of recurrence-free survival was planned to take place after 214 or more events of disease recurrence or deaths before recurrence had occurred. Analysis was by intention to treat (ITT). This study is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov, number NCT00033904. FINDINGS 48 patients in the vitespen group and 42 in the observation group were excluded from the ITT population because they did not meet post-surgery inclusion criteria; the ITT population thus consisted of 361 patients in the vitespen group and 367 in the observation group. Final analysis of recurrence-free survival was triggered in November, 2005. Re-review of all patients in the ITT population by the clinical events committee identified 149 actual recurrences (73 in the vitespen group and 76 in the observation group), nine deaths before recurrence (two in the vitespen group and seven in the observation group), and 124 patients with baseline metastatic or residual disease (61 in the vitespen group and 63 in the observation group). Thus, after a median follow-up of 1.9 years (IQR 0.9-2.5) in the ITT population, recurrence events were reported in 136 (37.7%) patients in the vitespen group and 146 (39.8%) in the observation group (hazard ratio 0.923, 95% CI 0.729-1.169; p=0.506). After continued follow-up until March, 2007, there had been 70 deaths in the vitespen group and 72 in the observation group (p=0.896); however, overall survival data were not mature, and patients continue to be followed up for survival. In predefined exploratory analyses by AJCC stage, recurrence events in patients with stage I or II disease were reported in 19 (15.2%) patients in the vitespen group and 31 (27.0%) in the observation group (hazard ratio 0.576, 95% CI 0.324-1.023; p=0.056). The most commonly reported adverse events in the vitespen group were injection-site erythema (n=158) and injection-site induration (n=153). One serious adverse event-autoimmune thyroiditis of grade 2 severity-was reported in the vitespen group; no treatment-related grade 3 or 4 adverse events were reported. INTERPRETATION No difference in recurrence-free survival was seen between patients given vitespen and those who received no treatment after nephrectomy for renal cell carcinoma. A possible improvement in recurrence-free survival in patients with early stage disease who received vitespen will require further validation.


The Journal of Urology | 2002

ERECTILE DYSFUNCTION AFTER RADICAL PROSTATECTOMY: HEMODYNAMIC PROFILES AND THEIR CORRELATION WITH THE RECOVERY OF ERECTILE FUNCTION

John P. Mulhall; Ron Slovick; James M. Hotaling; Nadid Aviv; Rolando Valenzuela; W. Bedford Waters; Robert C. Flanigan

PURPOSE Despite the advent of nerve sparing radical prostatectomy some men experience erectile dysfunction. Many of these men have vasculogenic erectile impairment in the form of arterial insufficiency or venous leakage. Recent data imply that early postoperative injection therapy may decrease the rate of erectile dysfunction. We defined hemodynamic patterns in patients who underwent bilateral nerve sparing radical prostatectomy to assess the chronology of venous leakage development and explore the correlation of hemodynamic profiles with the return of functional erection 12 months postoperatively. MATERIALS AND METHODS Patients with excellent preoperative erectile function who underwent bilateral nerve sparing surgery and had no pharmacological support for erectile dysfunction in the initial 12 months after surgery received vascular evaluation at presentation. Vascular evaluation involved cavernosometry or penile ultrasonography. Patients were then interviewed again at least 12 months postoperatively to assess the ability to achieve sexual intercourse. RESULTS Our study group comprised 96 men with a mean age plus or minus standard deviation of 54 +/- 12 years who met all inclusion criteria. All patients had pathologically proved organ confined disease. Mean time to the initial postoperative presentation was 6 +/- 5 months. Patients were divided into 4 groups according to the time of vascular studies postoperatively, namely less than 4 to 8, 9 to 12 and greater than 12 months. Normal vascular status, arterial insufficiency and venous leakage were diagnosed in 35%, 59% and 26% of the group, respectively. No difference in the incidence of arterial insufficiency was noted in the 4 time groups. Time postoperatively was significantly associated with the incidence of venous leakage (14% at less than 4 months and 35% at between 9 and 12). In regard to the correlation of the vascular diagnosis with the return to functional erection 47% of the normal, 31% of the arteriogenic and 9% of the venous leakage group achieved sexual intercourse 12 months postoperatively. CONCLUSIONS These data imply that the longer the duration of erectile dysfunction after radical prostatectomy, the greater the risk of venous leakage. Furthermore, it appears that the prognosis for the return of functional erection is worst when venous leakage is present.


Urology | 1993

EFFECT OF PATIENT AGE ON EARLY DETECTION OF PROSTATE CANCER WITH SERUM PROSTATE-SPECIFIC ANTIGEN AND DIGITAL RECTAL EXAMINATION *

Jerome P. Richie; William J. Catalona; Frederick R. Ahmann; M'Liss A. Hudson; Peter T. Scardino; Robert C. Flanigan; Jean B. deKernion; Timothy L. Ratliff; Louis R. Kavoussi; Bruce L. Dalkin; W. Bedford Waters; Michael T. Macfarlane; Paula C. Southwick

This study was designed to determine the effects of age by decade on the efficacy of digital rectal examination (DRE) and serum prostate-specific antigen (PSA) for early detection of prostate cancer in men aged fifty and over. A prospective multicenter clinical trial was conducted at six university centers. All 6,630 male volunteers underwent a serum PSA (Hybritech, Tandem) determination and DRE. Quadrant biopsies of the prostate were performed if PSA was > 4 ng/mL or DRE suspicious. A total of 1,167 biopsies were performed, and 264 cancers were detected. The cancer detection rate increased from 3 percent in men aged fifty to fifty-nine to 14 percent in men eighty years or older (p < 0.0001). PSA detected significantly more of the total cancers than DRE at all age ranges (p < 0.05). The positive predictive values (PPV) for PSA were 32 percent (50-59 years), 30 percent (60-69 years), 34 percent (70-79 years), and 38 percent (80+ years). The corresponding PPVs for DRE were 17 percent, 21 percent, 25 percent, and 38 percent. Eighteen percent of the cancers were detected solely by DRE, whereas 45 percent of cancers were detected solely by PSA. Thus, the use of both tests in combination provided the highest rate of detection in all age groups. One hundred-sixty patients underwent radical prostatectomy and pathologic staging. Cancer was organ-confined in 74 percent (25/34) of men aged fifty to fifty-nine, 76 percent (65/86) of men aged sixty to sixty-nine, and 60 percent (24/40) of men aged seventy or over (chi 2, < 70 vs. > or = 70, p < 0.05). Early detection programs yield a lower, yet still substantial, cancer detection rate in younger men, and there is a greater likelihood for detection of organ-confined disease in this age range. Younger men have the longest projected life expectancy and, therefore, the most to gain from early prostate cancer detection.


The Journal of Urology | 1994

Accuracy of Digital Rectal Examination and Transrectal Ultrasonography in Localizing Prostate Cancer

Robert C. Flanigan; William J. Catalona; Jerome P. Richie; Frederick R. Ahmann; M’Liss A. Hudson; Peter T. Scardino; Jean B. deKernion; Timothy L. Ratliff; Louis R. Kavoussi; Bruce L. Dalkin; W. Bedford Waters; Michael T. Macfarlane; Paula C. Southwick

Not all prostate cancers are sonographically hypoechoic or palpable on digital rectal examination, and suspicious areas on transrectal prostatic ultrasonography or digital rectal examination often are not cancer. We present quadrant biopsy results from a multicenter prostate cancer screening study in which men were evaluated with prostate specific antigen (PSA) and digital rectal examination. If the PSA level was elevated (greater than 4.0 ng./ml., Hybritech Tandem assay) or digital rectal examination was suspicious quadrant biopsies were performed. Biopsy specimens were labeled separately, and histological findings were correlated by quadrant with the findings on ultrasonography and digital rectal examination. Of the 6,630 subjects enrolled into the study 16% were biopsied. Of 1,002 quadrants that were suspicious on digital rectal examination 110 (11%) had cancer, while 308 of 418 quadrants containing cancer (74%) were not suspicious on digital rectal examination. Of 855 quadrants that were sonographically suspicious 153 (18%) had cancer, while 282 of 435 quadrants containing cancer (65%) were not sonographically suspicious. Of 225 patients with cancer 137 (61%) would have been missed if only the exact site of the palpable induration had been biopsied. Of 251 patients with cancer 131 (52%) would have been missed if only the exact site of the hypoechoic lesion had been biopsied. We conclude that digital rectal examination and transrectal ultrasonography have limited accuracy in identifying and localizing prostate cancer. Our study emphasizes the importance of obtaining systematic biopsies if the PSA level is elevated, even in the absence of digital rectal examination or ultrasound anomalies.


BJUI | 2004

The prevalence and nature of orgasmic dysfunction after radical prostatectomy.

Jennifer Barnas; Steven Pierpaoli; Patricia Ladd; Rolando Valenzuela; Nadid Aviv; Marilyn Parker; W. Bedford Waters; Robert C. Flanigan; John P. Mulhall

Section Editor


American Journal of Clinical Pathology | 2007

Xp11.2 Translocation Renal Cell Carcinoma With Very Aggressive Course in Five Adults

Paul N. Meyer; Joseph I. Clark; Robert C. Flanigan; Maria M. Picken

Renal cell carcinomas associated with Xp11.2 translocations ( TFE3 gene fusions) are rare tumors predominantly reported in children. We studied 5 cases of translocation carcinoma in adult patients, 18 years or older (mean age, 32.6 years). Tumors were examined histologically, immunohistochemically, and electron microscopically and correlated with the clinical picture. Most tumors showed solid sheets of clear to eosinophilic cells with rich vasculature and foci of papillary or pseudopapillary architecture. All cases showed strong nuclear positivity for TFE3. Vimentin and CD10 were positive in the cytoplasm. A panel of cytokeratin antibodies, smooth muscle actin, CD45, HMB45, and calretinin were negative. Patients had nonspecific initial complaints and were diagnosed with advanced disease, most with distant metastases. Various treatments met with minimal success. Unlike pediatric patients, the adult patients followed a rapidly terminal course, with a mean survival of 18 months after diagnosis (range, 10-24 months).

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Marcus L. Quek

Loyola University Medical Center

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Gopal N. Gupta

Loyola University Medical Center

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Robert H. Blackwell

Loyola University Medical Center

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Paul C. Kuo

Loyola University Medical Center

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W. Bedford Waters

Loyola University Medical Center

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Maria M. Picken

Loyola University Medical Center

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Eva M. Wojcik

Loyola University Medical Center

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E. David Crawford

University of Colorado Denver

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Girish Venkataraman

Loyola University Medical Center

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Jerome P. Richie

Brigham and Women's Hospital

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