0521779407-B01 CUNY1086/Karliner 0 521 77940 7 June 4, 2007 20:52
230 Benign Prostatic Hyperplasia
➣Prior surgery of the lower urinary tract
➣Screen for concomitant medications (see above)
management
What to Do First
■Rule out common indications for surgery
➣Gross hematuria (may be treated first with a trial of a 5-alpha
reductase inhibitor such as finasteride or dutasteride)
➣Bladder stones (may not require treatment of prostate by surgery
after successful removal; often medical therapy is sufficient for
LUTS)
➣Refractory urinary tract infection
➣Refractory retention after one attempt at catheter removal
➣Upper urinary tract compromise (elevated creatinine, hydro by
ultrasound)
General Measures
■Rule out all differential diagnoses, specifically prostate cancer by
serum PSA and DRE.
specific therapy
Indications
■Indications for surgical intervention (see above)
■If no absolute indications exist, decision for or against treatment
depends on the patient’s degree of bother.
Treatment Options
■Watchful Waiting
■Yearly follow-up with standard evaluation
Medical Therapies: Alpha Blocker
■First-line medical therapy: tamsulosin (Flomax); doxazosin (Car-
dura); terazosin (Hytrin), alfuzosin (Uroxatral)
■Improve all symptoms by about 30%, improve flow rate and emptying
■Adverse events: dizziness, asthenia (more common w/ doxazosin
and terazosin), fatigue, ejaculatory abnormalities (particularly tam-
sulosin)
■Medical Therapies: 5-alpha reductase inhibitor
■Finasteride (Proscar), dutasteride (Avodart)
■Reduces prostate volume by 20%, serum PSA by average of 50% by
blocking key enzyme in testosterone metabolism