Naked Science Forum

Life Sciences => Physiology & Medicine => Topic started by: JimBob on 07/03/2006 17:04:00

Title: Men & Cancer - Beware
Post by: JimBob on 07/03/2006 17:04:00
I hope all you men out there can benefit from my experience. If your doctor says something like this article below, tell him or her they are full of it.

I was diagnosed in early Nov. 2000. It was the Holiday season so my surgeon suggested that we wait until the folloing year because my case was so new that there would be no harm in it. PSA was 4.6, barely over the then alert level of 4 (now it is 2). Biopsies were positive only in the left lobe, two being 10% cearly stage - cell nuclei just starting to go amorphopus - and the third 20% beginning level. March of 3001 surgery scheduled. Biopsy came back with same levels of cancer development except for one small problem. The cancer had perforated the prostate capsule by less than a square millimeter and become involved with the nerves running on the ventral surface of the prostate. I had stage three cancer. Stage 4 means order the coffin. After waiting a year and a half tosee how bad it was (brilliant idea from the doctor) I decided to go to someone else and found out just how stupid I had been. I had radiation treatments and have had no PSA for 2 years. Denial is a hell of a place to be. Don't go there start PSA at 45 and dilligently attend to it. AND DO NOT WAIT TO SEE WHAT MIGHT HAPPEN!

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Delayed Prostate Cancer Surgery Poses No Increased Risk For Some Patients



Delaying surgery -- even for years -- for patients with small, low-grade prostate cancer does not appear to increase the risk of the disease progressing to an incurable form, according to a 10-year Johns Hopkins Medicine study.

The study, published in the March 1 issue of the Journal of the National Cancer Institute, found the risk of noncurable prostate cancer -- defined as a less than 75 percent chance of remaining disease-free 10 years after surgery -- was the same for men receiving immediate surgical treatment and those who waited -- on average -- two years before surgery.

"This study suggests that for carefully selected men with prostate cancer who are monitored, the window of cure does not close in the short term. For those men diagnosed with early-stage, low-grade prostate cancer, an alternative to immediate surgical treatment would be careful surveillance," says H. Ballentine Carter, M.D., a professor of urology at the Johns Hopkins School of Medicine and senior author of the study.

Some researchers believe delayed treatment combined with an active surveillance program could decrease over-treatment. Others, however, believe postponing surgery might shift the patient outside the window of curability.

Men screened for prostate cancer with the prostate specific antigen (PSA) test are on average diagnosed with the cancer 10 years earlier than men not undergoing PSA screening. While early diagnosis may contribute to a decrease in prostate cancer mortality in some patients, it may lead to invasive treatments of a cancer that may never present a health risk to the patient.

Carter says Hopkins has been enrolling patients in a monitoring program since 1995 with great success, although some patients prefer to go ahead and pursue treatment for "piece of mind."

"Some patients who learn they have cancer are anxious to have treatment 'yesterday'. We hope this study will illustrate that in many cases a safe alternative to immediate treatment is surveillance," Carter says. "Specifically, these would be men with small, low-grade tumors."

Three-hundred and twenty men believed to have these kinds of tumors have been enrolled in an active surveillance program since 1995. Small, low-grade prostate cancer was defined as having a PSA density (PSA divided by prostate volume) below 0.15, no more than two biopsy cores involved with cancer, no biopsy core that showed more than 50 percent cancerous tissue and no high-grade cancer.

Thirty-eight of these patients delayed surgery for a median 26.5 months. Outcomes in these men were compared with a similar group of 150 men who had surgery after a median three months. Results showed that the risk of noncurable prostate cancer was the same for both groups. Factors associated with risk of non-curable prostate cancer included age at time of diagnosis, PSA level and PSA density.

Carter said his group is now studying blood and tissue samples from this population to better understand what puts patients at risk while they're being monitored. He said they plan to look at biomarker changes, genetic factors and lifestyle choices.


http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2006/03/060306213515.htm
Title: Re: Men & Cancer - Beware
Post by: neilep on 08/03/2006 13:35:04
Jim,

Thank you for this and I'm please that you're here to report it !

Men are the same as women, just inside out !