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Dive into the research topics where Shellie M. Scott is active.

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Featured researches published by Shellie M. Scott.


The Journal of Urology | 1997

The Efficacy and Complications of Salvage Cryotherapy of the Prostate

Louis L. Pisters; Andrew C. von Eschenbach; Shellie M. Scott; David A. Swanson; Colin P. Dinney; Curtis A. Pettaway; R. Joseph Babaian

PURPOSE A phase I/II study was done to evaluate the efficacy and complications of salvage cryotherapy as a treatment for locally recurrent prostate cancer following full dose radiation therapy and/or systemic therapy. The efficacy of single and double freeze-thaw cycles was compared using posttreatment prostate specific antigen (PSA) levels and prostate biopsies as end points. MATERIALS AND METHODS A total of 150 patients with locally recurrent prostate cancer following radiation, hormonal therapy and/or systemic chemotherapy underwent salvage cryotherapy using a single (71 men, mean followup 17.3 months) or double (79 men, mean followup 10.0 months) freeze-thaw cycle. PSA was measured approximately every 3 months postoperatively and sextant biopsies were repeated 6 months postoperatively. Complications were assessed by retrospective chart review and a mailed quality of life survey. RESULTS Overall, 45 patients (31%) had persistently undetectable PSA. Patients with a history of radiation therapy only who underwent a double freeze-thaw cycle had a higher negative biopsy rate (93 versus 71%, p < 0.02) and lower biochemical failure rate (defined as an increase in serum PSA of 0.2 ng./ml. above the nadir value, 44 versus 65%, p < 0.03) than those who underwent a single freeze-thaw cycle. The main complications of salvage cryotherapy were urinary incontinence (73% of the patients), obstructive symptoms (67%), impotence (72%) and severe perineal pain (8%). CONCLUSIONS Salvage cryotherapy impacts local tumor control as evident by the high frequency of negative posttreatment biopsies. A double freeze-thaw cycle appears more effective than a single cycle. Like salvage prostatectomy, salvage cryotherapy causes significant morbidity.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2002

Salvage Cryotherapy for Recurrent Prostate Cancer After Radiotherapy: Variables Affecting Patient Outcome

Jonathan I. Izawa; Lydia T. Madsen; Shellie M. Scott; Jean Paul Tran; Edward J. Mcguire; Andrew C. von Eschenbach; Louis L. Pisters

PURPOSE To determine the long-term disease-specific survival (DSS) and disease-free survival (DFS) rates after salvage cryotherapy for locally recurrent adenocarcinoma of the prostate and to identify pretreatment factors that have an impact on DSS and DFS. PATIENTS AND METHODS Between July 1992 and January 1995, 131 patients who had received definitive radiation therapy (XRT) underwent salvage cryotherapy for locally recurrent adenocarcinoma of the prostate. Cryotherapy failure was defined as an increasing postcryotherapy prostate-specific antigen (PSA) level of > or = 2 ng/mL above the postcryotherapy nadir, a positive prostate biopsy, or radiographic evidence of metastatic disease. Clinical variables were studied to determine whether there was an association with the DSS and DFS. RESULTS The median follow-up was 4.8 years. The 5-year DSS rates were 87% for patients with a precryotherapy Gleason score < or = 8 and 63% for those with Gleason scores of 9 and 10 (P =.012). The 5-year DFS rates were 57% for patients with a precryotherapy PSA level of < or = 10 ng/mL and 23% for those with a PSA level greater than 10 ng/mL (P =.0004). The 5-year DSS rates for patients with a pre-XRT clinical stage of T1 to T2 and those with a clinical stage of T3 to T4 were 94% and 72%, respectively (P =.0041). The 5-year DFS rates for these groups were 90% and 69%, respectively (P =.0057). CONCLUSION Androgen-independent local recurrences, Gleason score, and pre-XRT clinical stage were important factors that had an impact on DSS and DFS. The subset of patients cured by salvage cryotherapy seems to be small, and patient selection is important.


The Journal of Urology | 2009

Locally Recurrent Prostate Cancer After Initial Radiation Therapy: A Comparison of Salvage Radical Prostatectomy Versus Cryotherapy

Louis L. Pisters; Dan Leibovici; Michael L. Blute; Horst Zincke; Thomas J. Sebo; Jeffrey M. Slezak; Jonathan I. Izawa; John F. Ward; Shellie M. Scott; Lydia T. Madsen; Philippe E. Spiess; Bradley C. Leibovich

PURPOSE We compared the treatment outcomes of salvage radical prostatectomy and salvage cryotherapy for patients with locally recurrent prostate cancer after initial radiation therapy. MATERIALS AND METHODS We retrospectively reviewed the medical records of patients who underwent salvage radical prostatectomy at the Mayo Clinic between 1990 and 1999, and those who underwent salvage cryotherapy at M. D. Anderson Cancer Center between 1992 and 1995. Eligibility criteria were prostate specific antigen less than 10 ng/ml, post-radiation therapy biopsy showing Gleason score 8 or less and prior radiation therapy alone without pre-salvage or post-salvage hormonal therapy. We assessed the rates of biochemical disease-free survival, disease specific survival and overall survival in each group. Biochemical failure was assessed using the 2 definitions of 1) prostate specific antigen greater than 0.4 ng/ml and 2) 2 increases above the nadir prostate specific antigen. RESULTS Mean followup was 7.8 years for the salvage radical prostatectomy group and 5.5 years for the salvage cryotherapy group. Compared to salvage cryotherapy, salvage radical prostatectomy resulted in superior biochemical disease-free survival by both definitions of biochemical failure (prostate specific antigen greater than 0.4 ng/ml, salvage cryotherapy 21% vs salvage radical prostatectomy 61% at 5 years, p <0.001; 2 increases above nadir with salvage cryotherapy 42% vs salvage radical prostatectomy 66% at 5 years, p = 0.002) and in superior overall survival (at 5 years salvage cryotherapy 85% vs salvage radical prostatectomy 95%, p = 0.001). There was no significant difference in disease specific survival (at 5 years salvage cryotherapy 96% vs salvage radical prostatectomy 98%, p = 0.283). After adjusting for post-radiation therapy biopsy Gleason sum and pre-salvage treatment serum prostate specific antigen on multivariate analysis salvage radical prostatectomy remained superior to salvage cryotherapy for the end points of any increase in prostate specific antigen greater than 0.4 ng/ml (HR 0.24, p <0.0001), 2 increases in prostate specific antigen (HR 0.47, p = 0.02) and overall survival (HR 0.21, p = 0.01). CONCLUSIONS Young, healthy patients with recurrent prostate cancer after radiation therapy should consider salvage radical prostatectomy as it offers superior biochemical disease-free survival and may potentially offer the best chance of cure.


PLOS ONE | 2012

Depressive Symptoms and Cortisol Rhythmicity Predict Survival in Patients with Renal Cell Carcinoma: Role of Inflammatory Signaling

Lorenzo Cohen; Steven W. Cole; Anil K. Sood; Sarah Prinsloo; Clemens Kirschbaum; Jesusa M.G. Arevalo; Nicholas B. Jennings; Shellie M. Scott; Luis Vence; Qi Wei; Diane Kentor; Laszlo Radvanyi; Nizar M. Tannir; Eric Jonasch; Pheroze Tamboli; Louis L. Pisters

Purpose Evidence has supported the association between psychological factors and cancer biology; however, findings are equivocal on the role of psychosocial factors in cancer progression. This study generates a hypothesis of mechanistic variables by examining the clinical effects of psychosocial factors and cortisol dysregulation in patients with metastatic renal cell carcinoma (RCC) and examines associated activation of transcription control pathways. Methods Patients with metastatic RCC (n = 217) were prospectively enrolled in this study. Patients completed questionnaires (Centers for Epidemiologic Studies – Depression; SF-36 Health Status Survey; Duke Social Support Index; Coping Operations Preference Enquiry; organized and non-organized religious activity; and intrinsic religiosity), and provided blood and saliva samples. Cortisol levels and whole genome transcriptional profiling were assessed to identify potential alterations in circadian rhythms and genomic pathways. Results Separate Cox regression models, controlling for disease risk category, revealed that CES-D scores (p = 0.05, HR = 1.5, 95% CI for HR: 1.00–2.23) and cortisol slope (p = 0.002; HR = 1.9; 95%CI for HR: 1.27–2.97) were significantly associated with decreased survival. Only cortisol slope and risk category remained significant in the complete model. Functional genomic analyses linked depressive symptoms to increased expression of pro-inflammatory and pro-metastatic genes in circulating leukocytes. 116 transcripts were found to be upregulated by an average of 50% or more in high CES-D patients, and 57 transcripts downregulated by at least 50%. These changes were also found in the tumor in a subset of patients. Conclusion These findings identify depressive symptoms as a key predictor of survival in renal cell carcinoma patients with potential links to dysregulation of cortisol and inflammatory biology.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 1999

Patient Selection for Salvage Cryotherapy for Locally Recurrent Prostate Cancer After Radiation Therapy

Louis L. Pisters; Paul Perrotte; Shellie M. Scott; Graham F. Greene; Andrew C. von Eschenbach

PURPOSE Our objective was to identify clinical pretreatment factors associated with early treatment failure after salvage cryotherapy. PATIENTS AND METHODS Between 1992 and 1995, 145 patients underwent salvage cryotherapy for locally recurrent adenocarcinoma of the prostate. Treatment failure was defined as an increasing postcryotherapy serial prostate-specific antigen (PSA) level of more than or equal to 2 ng/mL above the postcryotherapy nadir or as a positive posttreatment biopsy. We evaluated the following factors as predictors of treatment failure: tumor stage and grade at initial diagnosis, type of prior therapy, stage and grade of locally recurrent tumor, number of positive biopsy cores at recurrence, and precryotherapy PSA level. RESULTS Among patients with a prior history of radiation therapy only, the 2-year actuarial disease-free survival (DFS) rates were 74% for patients with a precryotherapy PSA less than 10 ng/mL and 28% for patients with a precryotherapy PSA more than 10 ng/mL, P <.00001. The DFS rates were 58% for patients with a Gleason score of less than or equal to 8 recurrence and 29% for patients with a Gleason score greater than or equal to 9 recurrence, P <.004. Among patients with a precryotherapy PSA less than 10 ng/mL, DFS rates were 74% for patients with a prior history of radiation therapy only and 19% for patients with a history of prior hormonal therapy plus radiation therapy, P <.002. CONCLUSION Patients failing initial radiation therapy with a PSA more than 10 ng/mL and Gleason score of the recurrent cancer more than or equal to 9 are unlikely to be successfully salvaged. Patients failing initial hormonal therapy and radiation therapy are less likely to be successfully salvaged than patients failing radiation therapy only.


The Journal of Urology | 2000

SALVAGE PROSTATECTOMY WITH CONTINENT CATHETERIZABLE URINARY RECONSTRUCTION: A NOVEL APPROACH TO RECURRENT PROSTATE CANCER AFTER RADIATION THERAPY

Louis L. Pisters; Sharon F. English; Shellie M. Scott; O. Lenaine Westney; Colin P. Dinney; Edward J. McGuire

PURPOSE Salvage prostatectomy after full dose radiation therapy is associated with a high risk of urinary incontinence. We evaluated the complications of salvage prostatectomy with continent catheterizable reconstruction and its impact on urinary incontinence. MATERIALS AND METHODS Between August 1995 and February 1999, 13 patients with biopsy proved, locally recurrent prostate cancer after radiation therapy underwent salvage prostatectomy with complete bladder neck closure and reconstruction with an appendicovesicostomy to the native bladder in 9 and ileovesicostomy in 4. RESULTS There were no intraoperative complications. Four patients had serious complications necessitating reoperation, including a vesicourethral fistula requiring delayed cystectomy, wound dehiscence with disruption of the appendicovesical anastomosis, leakage from the small bowel anastomosis that resulted in sepsis and death, and stomal stenosis requiring delayed stomal revision in 1 each. Of 12 patients 2 (17%) used pads for incontinence, while 10 were dry during the day and night with a catheterization interval of 2 to 6 hours. CONCLUSIONS Salvage prostatectomy with continent catheterizable reconstruction is a technically challenging operation with the potential for serious complications. The postoperative continence rate is excellent and appears superior to those in the literature for salvage prostatectomy and vesicourethral anastomosis.


The Journal of Urology | 2001

LOCAL TUMOR CONTROL WITH SALVAGE CRYOTHERAPY FOR LOCALLY RECURRENT PROSTATE CANCER AFTER EXTERNAL BEAM RADIOTHERAPY

Jonathan I. Izawa; Paul Perrotte; Graham F. Greene; Shellie M. Scott; Lawrence B. Levy; Edward J. Mcguire; Lydia T. Madsen; Andrew C. von Eschenbach; Louis L. Pisters

PURPOSE We identified variables associated with a positive prostate biopsy after salvage cryotherapy in patients in whom initial external beam radiotherapy for prostate cancer failed to improve our cryotherapy technique, optimize local control and improve our patient selection criteria for salvage cryotherapy. MATERIALS AND METHODS Between July 1992 and January 1995, 145 patients underwent salvage cryotherapy. Post-cryotherapy sextant prostate biopsies were performed in 107 cases. We evaluated certain variables on univariate and multivariate analysis as predictors of a positive biopsy after cryotherapy, including the type of previous therapy, tumor stage and grade at initial diagnosis, prostate volume, pre-cryotherapy prostate specific antigen (PSA), number of positive biopsy cores before cryotherapy, PSA nadir after cryotherapy, stage and grade of local recurrence, number of cryoprobes, number of freeze-thaw cycles and use of a urethral warming catheter during cryotherapy. RESULTS Biopsies were positive in 23 cases (21%) after salvage cryotherapy. Variables associated with a positive biopsy on univariate analysis were initial stage, precryotherapy PSA, PSA nadir after cryotherapy, number of cryoprobes, number of freeze-thaw cycles and a history of chemotherapy (p = 0.005, 0.027, 0.001, 0.009, 0.018 and 0.008, respectively). Variables that remained associated with a positive biopsy on multivariate analysis were the number of probes used and post-cryotherapy PSA nadir (p = 0.013 and 0.019, respectively). CONCLUSIONS Patients with initial clinical stage T1-2N0M0 disease and PSA no more than 10 ng./ml. have a higher rate of negative biopsies after salvage cryotherapy. Therefore, they are better candidates for salvage cryotherapy for locally recurrent prostate adenocarcinoma after external beam radiotherapy. To optimize the potential for local control the technique of salvage cryotherapy should include 2 freeze-thaw cycles and a minimum of 5 cryoprobes. Detectable PSA after salvage cryotherapy is a strong predictor of local failure.


The Journal of Urology | 1999

A feasibility study of cryotherapy followed by radical prostatectomy for locally advanced prostate cancer.

Louis L. Pisters; Colin P. Dinney; Curtis A. Pettaway; Shellie M. Scott; R. Joseph Babaian; Andrew C. von Eschenbach; Patricia Troncoso

PURPOSE There has been a significant shift toward multimodality therapy to try to eradicate extracapsular disease better in patients with locally advanced prostate cancer. We assess the feasibility and complications of initial cryotherapy followed by radical prostatectomy, and evaluate the frequency and location of viable benign and malignant prostate tissue and positive surgical margins after this treatment combination. MATERIALS AND METHODS A total of 12 patients with clinical stage T3 cancer or clinical stages T1c to T2, Gleason score 8 to 10 cancer on the initial biopsy were treated with initial cryotherapy followed by open surgical exploration 2 to 8 days later. If pelvic lymph nodes were negative, radical prostatectomy was performed. Prostate specific antigen was measured approximately every 3 months postoperatively, and complications were assessed by retrospective chart review and a quality of life survey. RESULTS Radical prostatectomy was aborted in 5 patients with positive pelvic lymph nodes. Of the 7 patients who underwent prostatectomy 4 had no residual prostate cancer in the specimen (pathological stage pT0 disease). All 7 of these patients had focal areas of viable normal prostate glands. Only 1 of the 7 patients had a positive surgical margin and biochemical failure (mean followup 22.6 months). The main complications of cryotherapy followed by radical prostatectomy were urinary incontinence and impotence. CONCLUSIONS Neoadjuvant cryotherapy achieved complete tumor destruction in 4 of 7 patients with locally advanced prostate cancer. Cryotherapy followed by radical prostatectomy was associated with substantial morbidity, mainly in terms of urinary incontinence.


The Journal of Urology | 2000

MAJOR SURGERY TO MANAGE DEFINITIVELY SEVERE COMPLICATIONS OF SALVAGE CRYOTHERAPY FOR PROSTATE CANCER

Jonathan I. Izawa; Kamal Ajam; Edward J. McGuire; Shellie M. Scott; Andrew C. von Eschenbach; John Skibber; Louis L. Pisters

PURPOSE Severe complications of salvage cryotherapy may be debilitating and chronic but these complications may be managed by definitive extirpative surgical procedures. We evaluated the effectiveness of the major surgical procedures performed to manage these complications, and assessed patient survival and complications after extirpative surgery. MATERIALS AND METHODS Between 1992 and 1995 salvage cryotherapy was performed in 150 men with biopsy proved, locally recurrent prostate cancer after radiotherapy and/or systemic therapy. We retrospectively reviewed patient charts to assess the complications managed by extirpative surgery. RESULTS Extirpative surgery was performed in 6 of the 150 patients for serious complications, including uncontrollable hematuria, osteitis pubis, rectourethral fistula, refractory perineal pain, bladder outlet obstruction and complete urinary incontinence. Cystoprostatectomy was done in 4 patients, of whom 3 also underwent en bloc pubic symphysectomy. In the remaining 2 men salvage prostatectomy was performed with bladder neck closure and continent catheterizable stomal creation. Surgery successfully managed severe cryotherapy complications in all 6 cases. The complications of extirpative surgery included superficial wound infection in 1 patient and 3 incisional hernias in another. Prostate specific antigen was undetectable in 4 of the 6 men at 36, 38, 39 and 42 months, and detectable in 2 at 31 and 41 months, respectively. CONCLUSIONS Extirpative surgery may successfully alleviate severe salvage cryotherapy complications without major additive morbidity. Long survival duration justifies extirpative surgery in select patients with severe complications of salvage cryotherapy.


The Journal of Urology | 1998

PREDICTIVE VALUE OF PROSTATE SPECIFIC ANTIGEN NADIR AFTER SALVAGE CRYOTHERAPY

Graham F. Greene; Louis L. Pisters; Shellie M. Scott; Andrew C. von Eschenbach

PURPOSE We determined nadir prostate specific antigen (PSA) after salvage cryotherapy to distinguish patients who are potentially cured from those at risk for subsequent biochemical and biopsy proved failure. MATERIALS AND METHODS A total of 146 patients who underwent salvage cryotherapy were followed a median of 21 months (range 3 to 47) with regular serum PSA analysis and digital rectal examination. Sextant biopsies were performed at 6 months or earlier when PSA increased greater than 2 ng./ml. from the nadir value (biochemical failure) or there was a palpable local recurrence. We compared the incidence of biochemical failure and biopsy specimens positive for cancer to pretreatment PSA and posttreatment nadir PSA. RESULTS In 59 of the 146 patients (40%) PSA decreased to an undetectable level within a median of 3 months. In 85 of the 109 patients (78%) who underwent biopsy the specimens were negative for cancer. Low serum PSA nadir values were associated with low pretreatment PSA and a low incidence of biochemical failure. In 6 of 60 patients (10%) in whom PSA nadir was 0.5 ng./ml. or less and in 18 of 49 (37%) with a higher PSA nadir biopsy was positive for cancer. CONCLUSIONS A PSA nadir of 0.5 ng./ml. or less should be achieved after salvage cryotherapy. Higher nadirs are more likely to be associated with increasing posttreatment PSA and positive biopsies. PSA nadir is a better prognostic indicator of biochemical and biopsy proved failure after salvage cryotherapy than pretreatment PSA.

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Louis L. Pisters

University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center

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Andrew C. von Eschenbach

University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center

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Jonathan I. Izawa

University of Western Ontario

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Lydia T. Madsen

University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center

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Colin P. Dinney

University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center

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Graham F. Greene

University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences

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Lorenzo Cohen

University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center

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Paul Perrotte

Université de Montréal

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