A third of patients with lymph node-positive penile cancer don’t receive recommended care

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One third of men with lymph node-positive penile cancer don’t receive a lymph node dissection, the recommended care associated with an overall survival advantage, researchers from Fox Chase Cancer Center have found. The paper appears in JAMA Oncology.

The researchers used the National Cancer Database to evaluate patient care at hospitals nationwide, and found that men had a better overall survival rate after undergoing a lymph node dissection, while neither chemotherapy nor radiation was associated with a survival benefit. But, they found that one third of patients did not undergo a lymph node dissection.

The National Comprehensive Cancer Network guidelines advocate for lymph node dissection or radiotherapy with consideration of perioperative chemotherapy for all patients with lymph node-positive penile cancer without metastasis.

Researchers also found that while the use of chemotherapy has increased over the past decade, rates remain below 50 percent. Older patients in particular were less likely to receive chemotherapy.

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