Nutrition & more for living well with metastatic prostate cancer?
62 year old male diagnosed with metastatic Prostate cancer with a PSA level 36. Prostate was removed May 2024. Cancer is now in ribs, Pelvic and scapula areas. I started Orgovyx today. Starting Taxotere 9/17/2024. Waiting on Zytiga for insurance approval.
Are there any nutritional elements available? Has Holistic approaches, vitamins, or acupuncture available to help with the recovery process?
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@jeffmarc and @northoftheborder, allow me to step in here. We only have words on a screen without the benefit of tone and body language. A forum like this one is most helpful when we treat each other with mutual respect as per the community guidelines https://connect.mayoclinic.org/blog/about-connect/tab/community-guidelines/
Let's remember that we are all on the same side here. We're fighting prostate cancer, not each other.
In this particular instance, you're both right. Yay!
"Good nutrition MAY help reduce the risk of developing prostate cancer, slow progression of the disease, and prevent aggressive disease."
"Improved nutrition reduces the risk of heart disease, cancer, diabetes, and obesity, and usually improves overall quality of life. It’s estimated that one-third of cancer deaths of adults in the United States may be linked to poor diet, including diet’s effect on obesity. A healthy diet helps to increase energy levels, facilitate recovery, and enhance the immune system.
It’s important to evaluate diet choices when it comes to risk of prostate cancer. Research is continually being conducted on foods and diets that may reduce or increase the risk of prostate cancer."
Read more https://zerocancer.org/about-prostate-cancer/diet-and-nutrition
Studies are ongoing and no specific diet that is right for every prostate cancer patient. Red meat and processed meats are often called out as something to avoid for many health conditions. Reducing or eliminating them from one's diet (as you both have done), is good for most people. However, it is incorrect to say that it "feeds cancer." As pointed out in an earlier post, when anemic, a doctor or nutritionist may recommend red meat for a period of time.
Everyone is different.
Bottom line takes me back to the community guidelines which state:
"Sharing your own experience is fine, but don't tell other members what they should do."
What made me feel better was toast and tea. I'm not suggesting that they're prostate-cancer cures; just that they were the first food I was able to make for myself in the patient lounge after 3 months in hospital, once I was allowed to transfer from bed to wheelchair unsupervised, and they represented a major turning point in independence and my ability to eat again. They still make me feel good every morning.
I don't deny that there are strong links between what we eat and how we feel (and how well we recover); the problem comes when a person assumes that everyone else will have the same experience they had. I think it's fantastic that you felt better after you stopped eating red meat, for example, but someone experiencing ADT-induced anemia might have exactly the opposite experience if it causes their iron to drop further.
(Sorry, I posted the previous comment before I read @colleenyoung 's very helpful post.)
Search on the web for red meat and prostate cancer
Then there are studies here is just one
https://www.cancer.org/research/acs-research-highlights/prostate-cancer-research-highlights/survivorship-studies/study-prostate-cancer-survivors-who-eat-more-chicken-and-less-steak-may-live-longer.html#:~:text=Results%20of%20the%20study%20suggest,bacon%2C%20ham%2C%20and%20luncheon%20meats
If we are posting feel good meals, I sure do look forward to the weekend. Fried Spam and egg sandwich with a slice of cheese. Works every time for me. I understand I probably don't need to eat two of them but oh well. Best to all.
I was going to say something similar. Of course, eating a decent diet and maintaining a good weight is going to help you be stronger than a diet of junk food and being very overweight, but all things in moderation.
I followed all the nutrition and exercise advice for close to 25+ years and still got prostate cancer. I also read that frequent ejaculation prevents prostate cancer and I did that as frequently as possible, too and, while enjoyable, it didn't prevent anything.
Zytiga, generic brand is $13,000 per month after insurance.
I was diagnosed 3.9 years ago, Advanced Prostate Cancer Stage 4. First year was rough. Year two my new oncologist gave me the "Quality of Life Talk." Which really comes down to living a "Wellness" life style. Which for me means mindful exercise, nutrition, spirituality, meditation. Living a "Wellness Life Style" and living it well has helped me. I'm living the best version of myself level. Hope, positivism, mindful living everyday.
Greetings:
I am 74 and was diagnosed in February of 2023 with score of 9 (4+5) psa. of 25 bad news all around.
Had the prostate removed on July of 2023 psa of < .01. however it is still on its way back.
Because I am retired, and, had time on my hands, I was basically board out my my mind.
When I got the bad news I took the opportunity to spend hours researching all aspects of the problem.
That means studying all medical aspects of the cancer and the treatments available.
Each person is unique individual with their own set of circumstances, personality, etc.
For example everything about spiritually, mediation etc does not apply because I never went to pieces as some men do. I am simply going to kick it's butt and that is all there is to it. period.
However, the part about diet and exercise I do take very seriously.
In conclusion, my advise is to take the bull by the horns and figure out what works for your own situation.
It is ok to ask what others did, and then use what applies to you, and disregard the rest.
Please don't ask others what should you do.
I was paying $98 for generic Zytiga with insurance. Before it became generic, I was paying $280 a month for 120 pills.
Even the non generic doesn’t cost $13,000 without insurance since it has been out so long.