Gleason7(3+4) - treatment options recommendation
Got recently diagnosed with Gleason group 2, 7(3+4). Was in state of shock to know about the cancer.
I’m 56 year old and fortunately I’m with Mayo care since last decade.
Recommendation for me is to have prostatectomy as radiation therapy has long term implications. Took outside opinion also and same recommendation. But not sure how to deal post procedure with urge to urinate situation currently there.
Biggest thing is I’m hoping there is no recurrence occurring after this. Any suggestion/recommendation?
Interested in more discussions like this? Go to the Prostate Cancer Support Group.
Thanks for the update Sir ! This is great information.Makes sense if soem benign cells stick to Bladder neck . Excellent point . My urologist did say "some cells stick to areas , but we try and get them all , however just because yoru PSA is now at 0.056 , this means that some cells are producing a VERY SMALL amount of PSA . It doesn't mean they are cancerous . "With your slow PSA movements , I doubt they are cancerous in my opinion" my doctor said . I just try and enjoy each day to the fullest and do some good each day . Today , I will be hiking with my Dogs up a mountain , good seep grade so I will get a sweat on ! Dogs like it too ! Then a quick Sauna . Here in BC we consider undetectable as being 0.008 . You are one notch above this . Thats a very low figure . How low do your machines go ? Ours go to 0.008 , thats about it for the bottom of sensitivity at most labs here on the Island . Keep me updated on yoru progress . Im sure you will do Very well ! God Bless Sir . James on Vancouver Island .
sorry guy, PSA tests dont lie....it prevents the cancer from spreading in the long run. Look up mushrooms lowering PSA. My MO says that s a good idea to eat them.
Wow that seems risky. But 3+4 better!
Great info but what does NS RALP stand for? I have not seen that acronym, or if I have I am not connecting. I assume NS stands for non-surgical..
Say, thanks for the kudos but it wasn’t me on the Trimix. I had to look it up myself after your post! Good luck and great plan you have!
Nerve Sparing Robotic Assisted Surgery
best luck pmclarkar
Ok thanks Gently! I actually have a consult appt in Pensacola today on NS robotic prostatectomy! 😀. Trying to understand all my options.
I am going through the same journey with doctors in Boston. I will be 69 years old in a month, and have: GS 4+3 in 2 cores (left and lateral 8%, right target 25%) - GS 3+3 in 2 cores (left and medial 30%, left posterior lateral 30%), PSA 6.73 — Intermediate undesirable cancer. Options are surgery or radiation with 6 months of hormone treatments.
Have meet with doctors from Dana Farber Cancer Center and Mass General. Over and over I have been told either course of treatment will work with a 98% cure rate, but both have different side effects. Dana Farber has had a very good track record with Image Guided Radiation Therapy, and much lower side effects than the national average.
One has to make a choice as to which side effects you can or can't deal with. After weeks of research, I have found that side effects from radiation can be long term, and side effects from surgery are immediate, and most often they resolve in 3-6 months, sometimes it might take up to a year for complete urine control. At first I was leaning toward radiation, but now I am leaning towards surgery. I have had a PSMA test that showed only cancer in the prostate. Right now I will be asking about a Decipher test. A surgeon I spoke with yesterday once again said either treatment would work for me and spelled out the data on surgery. Last week I also met with my urologist that I have been seeing for eight years, and he recommended surgery, he said it was "predictable" and could not say the same for radiation. I have recorded every appointment with every specialist on my phone and I have been listening to the recordings now that about 7 weeks have passed since my biopsy. You would be surprised about the details you missed during an in person visit or a Zoom call. (My doctor said surgery cannot be done right away after a biopsy, as the prostate is inflamed from the procedure...at least 6-8 weeks are needed before taking next steps, and I was told not to rush, but to feel comfortable with the treatment choice). Good luck in your journey.
I agree. I remember a long time ago using saw palmetto to keep my PSA down. My urologist warned me that it produces a false negative PSA result . Don’t know the biochemical reason why but perhaps mushrooms do the same thing?
A friend of mine took a pharmaceutical dose of green tea extract for his leukemia rather than chemo. His doctor at Leahy Clinic in Boston actually encouraged him on this. IT WORKED! His blood was good for years.
Now Green Tea is also touted as lowering PSA and fighting prostate cancer (and others). But the guy GOT prostate cancer and had surgery. So be careful of JUST looking at PSA even though it’s the only real marker we have right now aside from certain genomic tests.
BTW, my friend beat leukemia, beat prostate cancer and then fell off a ladder trying to clean his gutter on the second story of his home. He is still confined to a wheelchair to this very day….sometimes you just can’t win…
The long term outcomes (successes and failures) are about the same for both surgery and radiation.
I still have lasting side effects from surgery 5 yrs out so just be aware that every case is different. Pick a treatment, go with it, and NEVER second guess yourself later on. It’s the worst thing you can do and it is pointless. Best of Luck!