The patient may be asymptomatic, the carcinoma being an incidental finding at autopsy. This is a common finding in patients with localised prostate cancer (confined within the capsule) and locally advanced prostate cancer (1)
In symptomatic disease, presentation may be due to the primary disease, secondary spread, or from general effects of malignancy.
Features of the primary disease may include:
Features of metastatic disease:
In addition patients may present with general effects of malignancy such as fatigue, lethargy, weight loss, anaemia, anorexia, arthropathy (especially the lower limb) (2).
On rectal examination, the prostate may show asymmetrical, nodular enlargement. It may feel characteristically stony hard and irregular with obliteration of the median sulcus. However, the gland may appear normal or smoothly enlarged as in benign hypertrophy.
Note:
Reference:
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