Hi Jeff,
thanks very Much for your response and insight, its clear you have a good understanding of this disease and follow the medical advances.
There were a total of 19 lymph nodes removed I guess I should have included more of the pathology report for clarity, here it is. It references invasive carcinoma at the margin which seems to go along with the Metastic Prostate Carcinoma found in the one lymph node.
Our follow up appointment is on Feb 24 where presumably we will discuss ADT as well as radiation, we had discussed going on hormone therapy prior to surgery but only had about two weeks prior to surgery so decided to deal with the surgery first then look at the next steps. They did tell us that the normal follow up after surgery is three months later but because the cancer is more aggressive we are having it after two months. My understanding is that radiation generally needs to wait between four and six months post surgery to give area time to heal properly but the hormone therapy can be started anytime, not sure if I have that right or not or what others experience has been on how long they waited to do these other treatments after the surgery.
Thanks again for your thoughtful response it is very much appreciated, have a great rest of your weekend!
Margin Status
Invasive carcinoma present at margin
Linear length of margin(s) involved: Three foci, less than 1 mm each Margin(s) involved: Left posterior
REGIONAL LYMPH NODES
Regional Lymph Nodes Status Regional Lymph Nodes Present
Tumor Present in Regional Lymph Node(s) Number of Lymph Nodes with Tumor: 1 Number of Lymph Nodes Examined: 19
DISTANT METASTASIS
Distant Metastasis. Distant Site(s) Involved: Not applicable
pTNM Classification (AJCC, 8th edition)
Modified Classification: Not applicable
pT Category: pT3a: Extraprostatic extension or microscopic invasion of bladder neck
T Suffix: Not applicable
pN Category: pN1: Metastasis in regional nodes
pM Category: Not applicable - pM cannot be determined from the submitted specimen(s)
Representative Tumor Block: C10, C16, C18
Comment: Select slides seen in consultation with Dr. Jordan Reynolds.
The synoptic report incorporates information from all relevant surgical material and includes all required data elements of the current CAP Cancer Protocol.
Hey Albcan, jeffmarc gave you some pretty good advice there; and while your case is a bit more aggressive, it IS totally treatable from here on out as a chronic illness; no “one and done” but neither is diabetes, HBP, heart disease and many others which we all carry to the end.
Yes, you do have to heal before radiation, but ADT is a miracle drug for stopping the spread and vigor of your wayward cells. Getting on it ASAP is important. Advocate for Orgovyx - if applicable to your case - since it is oral and many of the nastier side effects of ADT are mitigated. It should put your mind at ease knowing that while you heal your cancer is being dealt with. Best
Phil