11 anniversaries since diagnosis of stage 4 prostate cancer
Diagnosed at 63, I did not have the confidence at that time to believe I would live another 10 years. Yet, I just completed another follow-up visit in the past two weeks. My semiannual routine includes a blood draw for PSA and metabolic panel, followed by a visit to my oncologist's office. Given the many years of hormone therapy, they added a DEXA scan to check my bones.
Overall, they are happy with the results. PSA remains undetectable (might not be the most sensitive assay. My lipid levels remain elevated, so lipid-lowering medication may be inevitable in the near future, but it's not the end of the world. I hope my experience can encourage my fellow warriors. Living with prostate cancer is entirely achievable.
I also learned that the website for clinical trial matching that my oncologist pointed me to previously (inforeach.org) has added search for treatments recommended by clinical guidelines. It's quite intriguing as you can check if your treatment is consistent with the standard of care. Sharing this information for anyone who may want to check it out.
Interested in more discussions like this? Go to the Prostate Cancer Support Group.
That's great news. And, congratulations.
Fantastic, and gives increased hope to those of us with stage 4, or any stage for that matter. Thanks for sharing, the most helpful post that I have read to date on this site. Prayers and best wishes to all who have this disease. Let’s beat it!
such uplifting news as are so many stories here. my oncologist suggested when starting on Abiraterone after a radical prostatectomy 10 years after radiation treatment that getting my PSA to below 1 and especially to 0.1 would be where I'd want to get to. unfortunately after 4 months it was 1.5 & went no lower now at 3.6 & still just on Hormone therapy & feel it is time for a step up in treatment. i have metastatic stage 4 with 3 spots on my spine. anyone similar
"The literature on denovo metastatic prostate cancer does not explain what happened to me."
I'm so sorry you have to deal with that, too.
Advanced prostate cancer cases for men in their 50s and early 60s are rising now — the myths you referenced (prostate cancer is an elderly disease, it progresses slowly, advanced cases mainly occur in poor people who don't take care of their health, etc) encouraged health authorities around the world to recommend stopping routine PSA screening from age 50, and we're paying the price.
My onco team told me that about 5% of prostate cancer cases strike young (from late 40s to early 60s) and move fast — even with annual PSA screening, that kind often metastasises before it's detected.
Some well-known people with the early, aggressive type of PC:
Johnny Ramon
Stephen Fry
Robert DeNiro
Jack Layton (Canadian politician)
Colin Powell
Roger Moore
John Kerry
Mandy Patinkin
So yeah, there are lots of us, and having people ask "isn't that mainly for old people?" or "it's really slow, isn't it?" doesn't help.
Bless you. How long has it been since you you were diagnosed? My 2 year anniversary is coming up. For a mid 80's guy I'm doing very good but I wonder sometimes.
Congratulations on your anniversary!
I was diagnosed in 2012 at 56y with low-grade, localized prostate cancer and was on active surveillance for 9 years. After spending significant time reviewing the literature, I had complete confidence that this journey would turn out well.
Three years ago today (5/28/2021), I completed my last of 28 proton radiation treatments. Each day, I made the 40-minute drive to the proton center.
Treatments were relatively uneventful - it’s as if I just walked in a door, got treated (28x), and walked out the door….. After 28 full bladder/empty bowel proton beam radiation treatments later, it’s practically back to the way it was before the prostate cancer journey started.
Here we are now, 3 years since proton treatments ended; bloodwork still being done every 4 months, numbers are looking good; PSA varies between 0.35 ng/mL-0.55 ng/mL, and have had no lingering adverse after-effects. Hopefully, these positive results will continue.
Good luck to your results in the future!
Sorry to hear about the ordeals you went through. Thank God you were able to complete the triplet therapy. The fact that your PSA dropped to undetectable should be a very good sign.
I was probably not oligometastatic by definition: 5-6 pelvic bone metastases plus lymph nodes. But in 2013, drugs like darolutamide were not available (abiraterone was only approved for castration-resistant stage). My pre-RT PSA was about 0.5 and it looked unlikely to reach undetectable with ADT alone. It felt like a gamble to go for a treatment before there is consensus, but reasoning and checking published studies can help.
Thank you and best wishes to you! I was diagnosed in 2013 when I was 63. The treatment landscape back then was very different from today. Much more hope now to live a fairly normal life with prostate cancer.
I'm in my fifth year of prostate cancer, testosterone suppression no longer works. What type of treatment are you using?
That's quite an intimidating experience with PCa. Glad to see you had the perseverance to get to where you are and understand your frustration with future treatment outlook.
You could get a readout on the buffet of PCa cell types you currently have by requesting a wet biopsy. This simply looks for DNA mutations of cancer cells circulating in your blood. The pathology of the original cancer in your prostate may not be all that relevant now given that you've had multiple mets.
Based on your description I don't think I'd be going all "tin hat" on everyone by being suspicious of the timing of the vaccines, viral infection and your PCa diagnosis.
Best of luck to you sir!