
Active Surveillance for Early-Stage Prostate Cancer
Prostate Cancer Patient Conference
University of California Video Podcasts (Video) · UCTV: UC San Francisco
August 30, 202514m 45s
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Show Notes
Urologic oncologist Dr. Peter Carroll presents the latest research on active surveillance as a preferred approach for managing low-risk prostate cancer and selected cases of intermediate-risk disease. Drawing from two decades of UCSF data, he explains how long-term outcomes support the safety and effectiveness of delaying treatment for carefully monitored patients. Carroll emphasizes that surveillance decisions should be guided by MRI imaging, PSA density, cancer volume, histologic subtype, and genomic testing. He notes that while many men experience gradual changes over time, only a small percentage require immediate treatment. Carroll also discusses innovations such as AI-assisted pathology and risk profiling to reduce unnecessary procedures. His data-driven approach offers patients a personalized path that preserves quality of life without compromising outcomes. Series: "Prostate Cancer Patient Conference" [Health and Medicine] [Show ID: 40801]
Topics
prostatecancersurveillanceUCSFMRIPSAgenomicspathologyAICancer and OncologyMen’s Health40801