11 anniversaries since diagnosis of stage 4 prostate cancer

Posted by mccsjm @mccsjm, May 25 12:47am

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.

If I understand the video I watched from a Mayo oncologist correctly, for mCSPC, in addition to treating the prostate itself (radiation or surgery) and starting on ADT and an ARSI, there are two different paths for a proactive treatment:

1. Many metastases: use chemotherapy to attack the cancer preemptively.

2. Few metastases ("oligometastatic"): apply separate radiation therapy to each of the metastases.

I had just one (large) metastasis to my spine in 2021, so at my cancer centre in Canada we took the second approach after debulking surgery to remove most of the lesion. Now it's 2024, and so far, so good.

***

Notes:

mCSPC: metastatic castrate-sensitive prostate cancer (still responding to ADT)

ADT: androgen-deprivation therapy (e.g. Firmagon)

ARSI: androgen-reception signal inhibitor (e.g. Erleada)

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@retireddoc

I am 4b as well. I had essentially the same therapy as you (Johns Hopkins calls it Total Eradication Therapy-TET). My PSA is currently undetectable one and a half years after treatment and I am off all meds. My MO at Hopkins is heavily involved in research and I have read some of his articles. When cancer cells are stressed (chemo, radiation etc) some of them go into a hibernation state with double DNA; the cells look different under the microscope than the other cancer cells. After a time (don't know how long) when the stress is no longer present they begin dividing again. That is why some MO believe it is futile to have excessive chemo treatments which can have significant side effects. No matter how many you get you won't kill them all. The first 4 or so treatments kills 99% of what the chemo will do.

Good luck to you.

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Hibernation state is a great description since I was exposed to agent Orange in 1972, then the stage 4 cancer shows up in 2022 with pelvic lymph node involvement too. How to keep them in hibernation is the big question for me??

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@sixto

What Stage 4 do you have? Stage 4A is contained within the pelvic region. I was diagnosed with Stage 4B metathesis throughout my body to my lymph nodes in my upper body - chest, neck , thorax etc.
Diagnosed in August, 2023. My prognosis is 50% survival to 5 to 7 years after diagnosis.

Does anybody else have Stage 4B?

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The doctors really do not know how long you will live with this disease. I have a friend that coming up to his 9 years anniversary. He started de novo with cancer in his lymph system and a PSA over 1400. Everyone responds to treatment differently. I just had my 2 year appointment with my oncologist and she said some patients get radiation, ADT, an ARSI (darolutamide, apalutamide, xdandi) and 6 chemotherapies (docetaxel). For some men, their PSA continues to rise and they do not respond. Even with a few metastases. On the other, some men with a higher volume of metastases receives the same treatment and their PSA drops < 0.100 and stays there for many many years. If we were all being honest, this disparity is what scares us, because you just do not know how you will respond to treatment. One man's Adenocarcinoma cancer is different that another's. This drives me crazy, because I am software developer. I deal in logic and repeatable facts. This all seems like gambling to me. Regardless, my oncologist said I have beaten all the milestones and odds. I think you know when know when you know. My cancer is not coming back. There is a small percentage of men that remain castrate sensitive for extended years and some never become castrate resistant.

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@stevecando54

I surrender, I can't figure out the difference between 4a and 4b, I guess it really doesn't matter at this point but I am still curious.

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My understanding is 4a is "locally advanced" - spread to pelvic nodes but not evident as distant mets.

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@northoftheborder

If I understand the video I watched from a Mayo oncologist correctly, for mCSPC, in addition to treating the prostate itself (radiation or surgery) and starting on ADT and an ARSI, there are two different paths for a proactive treatment:

1. Many metastases: use chemotherapy to attack the cancer preemptively.

2. Few metastases ("oligometastatic"): apply separate radiation therapy to each of the metastases.

I had just one (large) metastasis to my spine in 2021, so at my cancer centre in Canada we took the second approach after debulking surgery to remove most of the lesion. Now it's 2024, and so far, so good.

***

Notes:

mCSPC: metastatic castrate-sensitive prostate cancer (still responding to ADT)

ADT: androgen-deprivation therapy (e.g. Firmagon)

ARSI: androgen-reception signal inhibitor (e.g. Erleada)

Jump to this post

There is a third approach for oligo metastatic disease. Treat the primary tumor with surgery or radiation, triple therapy (Darolutamise, Lupron and chemo) to systemically treat any micro metastatic disease and also radiate the few nodal or bony metastases with intent to kill all visible macro disease.

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@ecurb

Hibernation state is a great description since I was exposed to agent Orange in 1972, then the stage 4 cancer shows up in 2022 with pelvic lymph node involvement too. How to keep them in hibernation is the big question for me??

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Same, I was exposed to Agent Orange, also in 1972. Stage 4a showed up in 2020. 3.8 Years after diagnosis 70 years old still going, best version level.

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@proftom2

Same, I was exposed to Agent Orange, also in 1972. Stage 4a showed up in 2020. 3.8 Years after diagnosis 70 years old still going, best version level.

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Mine showed up in 2022. My friend on ship with me showed up in 2020. Were both on ADT to keep PSA < .01. I think we got it in Haiphong harbor, it was in the water, and we took showers with the dioxin in the water.

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@retireddoc

There is a third approach for oligo metastatic disease. Treat the primary tumor with surgery or radiation, triple therapy (Darolutamise, Lupron and chemo) to systemically treat any micro metastatic disease and also radiate the few nodal or bony metastases with intent to kill all visible macro disease.

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Thanks for sharing that!

From what I understand, chemo for oligometastatic PCa that's still castrate-sensitive remains controversial, though it's getting more mainstream as a proactive treatment for castrate-resistant and/or high-volume metastatic cancer.

It will be interesting watching how best practices change over the next few years.

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Same here. Haiphong Harbor, 1972, Operation Linebacker or Linebacker II. Thinking it was in the water, shower and gallons of water I drank on the bridge wing. Two of my shipmates have it. One's PC is mild, the other was Stage 4 and he left us two years ago.

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@northoftheborder

Thanks for sharing that!

From what I understand, chemo for oligometastatic PCa that's still castrate-sensitive remains controversial, though it's getting more mainstream as a proactive treatment for castrate-resistant and/or high-volume metastatic cancer.

It will be interesting watching how best practices change over the next few years.

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Just to add to the conversation a bit more. My MO and his NP have been treating oligo metastatic disease, as I described in my other post, for a number of years now. In fact, a search of the literature is how I discovered them, contacted them by email which led to a Zoom consultation and then treatment in 2022. I read an article by Diane Reyes (his NP) and Ken Pienta ( my MO) titled "Total Eradication Therapy". It was a smaller series of men treated with RP/radiation of the primary, triple therapy, MDT with radiation to the few mets and pelvic radiation. This was in the initial castrate sensitive state. The ADT (Lupron) was discontinued after one year in patients with an undetectable PSA. The majority had their T return to normal levels while maintaining an undetectable PSA off all medication. I remain undetectable after completing triple therapy in 12/22 and last 3 month Lupron injection in 7/23. My T has yet to return to normal, although they say this can take a year after the effects of the ADT wear off.

You are right that this aggressive treatment is still controversial, but hitting the cancer hard in the beginning and killing as many clones and cells as possible made sense to me.

Dr. Pienta is the Director of the Johns Hopkins Brady Urologic Research Institute and holds appointments in the Departments of Urology, Medical Oncology and Molecular Biology. He has published > 300 peer reviewed articles on prostate research, diagnosis and treatment. I have total confidence in both him and Diane Reyes. I will do as they suggest. I have read on many forums patients that read literature and try to direct their own treatment to some degree. That doesn't work for me. I know just enough to be dangerous having practiced medicine for 40 years but also know enough to realize my specialists know much more than me.

Each person needs to find their own path and I wish everyone the best.

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