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Advanced prostatic carcinoma: pulmonary manifestations.
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1985
Year
Pleural EffusionStandard Chest RadiographyOncologySurgical PathologyPleural DiseaseRadiation OncologyRadiologyHealth SciencesMedical ImagingAdvanced Prostatic CarcinomaPulmonary MedicinePulmonary BlastomaRadiologic ImagingProstatic DiseaseLung CancerUrologyProstatic AdenocarcinomaMultiple Pulmonary NoduleRadiographic CorrelationMedicine
To clarify the role of standard chest radiography in prostatic adenocarcinoma, the pulmonary manifestations of 198 patients with Stage D disease were evaluated. All patients were treated with chemotherapeutic protocols allowing for adequate clinical and radiographic correlation. Retrospective interpretation of serial chest radiographs revealed that 35% of our patients had visible intrathoracic abnormalities; however, only 24% of the patients had abnormalities attributable to intrathoracic metastases. Twenty-two percent of patients had pleural effusions, 16% reticular opacities, 3.5% reticulonodular opacities, 8% isolated or discrete pulmonary nodules, and 4.5% adenopathy. Etiologies of these opacities included metastatic disease in 93.5% of those with adenopathy and nodular or reticulonodular opacities, but 39% of pleural effusions and 52% of reticular opacities were best attributed to concomitant processes. Four patients had intrathoracic metastases without bone metastases. Standard chest radiography is a valuable screening procedure that should be correlated with clinical data to differentiate metastases from concomitant processes.