Do you have questions men's health related?
Please send them!
If you have a question related to men's health, please fill the form bellow.
1. It is a must to provide a valid email, unless you want your questions to be ignored.
We won't make your email public, but we like to talk with live persons.
2. To protect
your identity, take care the name you fill. We make public your name exactly as it is.
Public release date: 18 October 2008
[
]
Enlarged prostates: The choice of treatment needs careful consideration
There are many options now for managing enlarged prostate symptoms, but new surgical techniques are often over-promoted.
In the last few years, the treatment options for enlarged prostate problems have expanded. The German Institute for
Quality and Efficiency in Health Care (IQWiG) has assessed new treatment and warns that some new surgical techniques are
being heavily promoted without first having been adequately evaluated.
Informed choices are essential
For many men, the symptoms of this condition are just annoying. But for some men, an enlarged prostate means going to
the toilet so often that a good night's sleep has become a thing of the past. Most of the time the cause is an enlarged
prostate, a condition doctors call "benign prostatic hyperplasia". One in five men in their 50s are affected - and the
majority of men in their 70s will have symptoms.
The treatment choices have greatly expanded in recent years. However IQWiG's evaluation of the research raises questions
about many surgical techniques. According to the Institute's Director, Professor Peter Sawicki, "Not everything that is
new is necessarily an improvement. Better information is necessary to help men and their doctors weigh up the advantages
and disadvantages of the various treatments."
To that end, IQWiG has published easy-to-understand summaries of the research in this area on IQWiG's website for the
public, www.informedhealthonline.org. Included is information on managing enlarged prostate symptoms, medicines and surgical options as well as the stories of men who have used different treatments.
Most men with BPH symptoms will never need surgery
According to researchers' best estimates, about 3 out of every 10 men in Europe will handle their prostate symptoms without medication or surgery and perhaps only 1 in 10 will have surgery. The rest will use medications, including herbal medicines, if their symptoms become too troublesome.
"In Germany and other European countries, drugs called alpha blockers have taken over as the most common treatment choice for benign prostatic hyperplasia," said Professor Sawicki. "These drugs were originally developed to reduce high blood pressure, but prostate symptoms will also improve at least a little for 60% of the men who use them."
In analysing the research results for surgery, the Institute concluded that the original surgical procedures still have the best results. A few of the new surgical techniques appear to have good results - for example, possibly shortening the time needed in hospital. But more research is needed to confirm this. And most of the new techniques use equipment that has not yet been tested in enough trials.
"Prostate surgery can be very effective, but the adverse effects are a major concern for many men. Some of the newer techniques might have fewer adverse effects, but they may be so much less effective that the symptoms return, as bad as ever, within a couple of years," Professor Sawicki said.
The Institute's website, www.informedhealthonline.org, provides the public with easy-to-understand information about current medical developments and research on important health issues. If you would like to be kept up-to-date with the latest publications on the independent health information website, you can subscribe to the informedhealthonline.org newsletter.
NOTE:
Issues on this site regarding men's health and their concerns, are provided for
information only, and are not meant to substitute for the advice of your own physician or other
medical professional. AskMenHealth.org does not endorse any specific product, service or treatment.