Urologist only offers Degarelix or Eligard, so what....
Urologist only offers Degarelix or Eligard, so what am I missing that she's convinced these injectables are the only way to go for recurrent PC after 43 rads, limited so far to the P; gleason of 7. It's her way, nothing, or find another provider, which is not easy in my area. I'm wanting to consider Orgovyx, for example.
Thanks for your insights!
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That is my next step, thank you. I guess I reached the trigger point when your switch from urologist to oncologist.
I'm sure that's occurring. I'm also certain that the payment methodology for injected medications that need special handling are more favorable to urology clinics than watching for possible reactions to expensive, take-yourself, by-mouth medications.
Totally agree with you. Finding a provider who recognizes when patients have the critical thinking and physical ability to be active in their own care has always been a challenge in the MD world.
I agree that resistance-training is a very good idea — everyone should follow the advice in this video if physically able — but based solely on personal experience, they overstate the consequences a bit (understandably, because even physicians aren't immune to riding a hobby-horse).
My PC diagnosis was accompanied by paraplegia from the mid spine down (the tumour had compressed my spinal cord), so I wasn't able to do the kind-of complete resistance program they described for many, many months. Certainly, my leg and core muscles atrophied a fair bit (because they were getting almost no nerve signals at all initially), and using my arms to pull myself from side-to-side in the hospital bed gave me some upper-body resistance work, but I didn't see anything like the dire effects they describe during the period when I was starting to become mobile, but couldn't yet get onto the floor or a weight bench for full resistance training.
I did do physio exercises in bed to the best of my ability, and I'm keeping them up now that I'm more mobile, but they were far below the level of weights or push-ups, and I doubt the claim that taking just a 4 week break from 3×/week resistance training would result in massive muscle loss on ADT (at least at my age, mid-50s at the time).
There will always be outliers and exceptions. But, study after study demonstrate the benefits. Here’s a recent study about the benefits of exercise to counteract the adverse effects of ADT: “Resistance Exercise Training Increases Muscle Mass and Strength in Prostate Cancer Patients on Androgen Deprivation Therapy” —> https://journals.lww.com/acsm-msse/fulltext/2023/04000/resistance_exercise_training_increases_muscle_mass.2.aspx
If for one reason or another, one can’t engage in that level of activity, well….such is life. But, the data are there for anyone to use should they choose to.
Helpful research and thanks, hopeful the needed energy will be there.