Objective To detect occult regional lymph node metastases in patients with T3pN0M0 prostate cancer not recognized by routine haematoxylin and eosin staining, and to evaluate the clinical relevance of this ®nding. Patients and methods Formalin-®xed and paraf®n-embedded pelvic lymph nodes (1118) from 92 patients were evaluated by immunohistochemistry using antibodies for prostate speci®c antigen (PSA) and pancytokeratin (AE1/AE3). Of the tumours, 14% were well, 69% moderately and 17% poorly differentiated. The extent of tumour was categorized as T3pN0M0 in all patients, who were referred for de®nitive radiotherapy after pelvic staging lymphadenectomy. The median (range) serum PSA value before treatment was 18.5 (0.4±342) mg/L. After radiotherapy, the patients were followed by assessing biochemical progression, pelvic recurrence and/or development of distant metastases. The median (range) observation time for all patients was 61 (16±136) months.Results Occult lymph node metastases were detected in four (4.4%) of the 92 patients. Patients with or without occult metastases had similar serum PSA levels and histological grades. None of the four patients with occult metastases progressed, compared with 37 of the 88 (42%) with no such metastases. Conclusion Using immunohistochemistry the detection rate of occult lymph node metastases in patients with T3pN0M0 prostate cancer is low. The occurrence of such metastases is probably unrelated to the serum PSA value before treatment. The short-term outcome of patients subsequently treated with de®nitive radiotherapy does not seem to be associated with the ®nding of occult lymph node metastases, but longterm follow-up is needed. So far, the results do not justify the search for occult lymph node metastases as a routine procedure in these patients
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