Objective: To correlate the findings of CT and ileoobturator lymphadenectomy in patients with localized adenocarcinoma of the prostate.
Methods: 94 patients with adenocarcinoma of the prostate were evaluated. Ileoobturator lymphadenectomy and brachytherapy were performed in 61.1%, radical prostatectomy in 22.5% and lymphadenectomy with prostatic labeling for subsequent external radiation therapy in 5%. Lymph node CT and pathology findings were correlated.
Results: Of 92 patients with a normal CT scan, 18 had positive nodes and 19.1% were understaged. Two patients with a CT scan suggestive of metastatic adenopathy had negative pathology findings. Seventy-two of the 92 patients with normal CT scans had negative nodes, accounting for a specificity of 76.6%.
Conclusion: Pelvic lymph node involvement changes the prognosis of prostate cancer. However, the ability of CT to detect lymph node metastasis is limited. It is therefore not a reliable method and raises the costs of staging unnecessarily.