Do you regret having had a prostatectomy vs. radiation, or vice-versa?

Posted by sanDGuy @sandguy, Jul 21 8:11pm

Just wondering whether there are some of you that already had a prostatectomy that they regret, and wish they had instead opted for radiation. Conversely, perhaps others chose radiation, but now regret not having just had a prostatecomy.
I'm currently wrestling with this question beforehand, and there seems a consensus that the curative results are equivalent, so I guess I'm wondering more about side effects and the like.
It might be helpful if you mention how long ago you had the respective procedure, please.
Thanks in advance!

Interested in more discussions like this? Go to the Prostate Cancer Support Group.

Profile picture for jcf58 @jcf58

Welcome to the world where there are no clear answers for most of us. It would be so much easier if it was like a broken arm, where the fix is a cast. You have received all kinds of good feedback. My advice is to research your options, determine what makes sense for you at this point in your life, go forward with your decision, and never 2nd guess your choice. Anybody that chose surgery and then had recurrence/side effects likely feels he should have chosen radiation. And of course, the same rings true if you chose radiation and had recurrence. It is human nature to wonder about the road not taken, but nobody can tell you for sure if that other road would have been better. I chose neither the radiation or surgery route and went with Tulsa Pro. I did the research and determined this was the right choice for my 4+3. I went in knowing the risk of a new treatment, but was very confident in the extensive follow up process I would be in. I had my 1 year check today at Mayo Rochester and the Doctor told me I can consider myself cancer free for now, and get back to giving blood every 2 months.

Jump to this post

I got radiation (SBRT), fell in the unlucky small percentage with long-term side-effects, and *still* have no regrets.

Surgery wasn't an option for me regardless with a distant metastasis, but for stage-4 prostate cancer traditionally they either would give no radiation or just a low "palliative" dose to the prostate itself. I opted for a large "curative" dose of 60 gy (which was just emerging as new standard of care in 2021), nearly the maximum allowed, and while it did cause some collateral damage to my lower bladder and rectum, it may also have helped bring me many more years of life, so I can cope with a bit of mild burning and urgency (which I've learned to manage).

In fact, every time I feel the mild burning, I tell myself "That means the radiation spread beyond the prostate and took care of any local cancer there as well". If a few still-undetectable cancer cells were starting to creep into my bladder or colon, the radiation likely sterilised them.

REPLY
Profile picture for chebo1954 @chebo1954

My personal belief is that invasive surgery will most likely result in the spread of cancer and there are so many surgeons that are eager to perform surgery- after all that is how they make their money!!

Jump to this post

I doubt that. I have not seen any evidence fir that and I went down the rabbit hole after my diagnosis reading every published study I could get my hands on. Not even PCRI mentions that risk in any if their videos.

REPLY

I regret surgery , maybe I was naive thinking surgery would get it all, was not prepared for radiation and Lupron to follow, numerous side effects and still no sex despite using injections, good luck

REPLY

There may be other factors not mentioned in this stream of responses. I consulted with a RO and was advised that the large size of my prostate and how it adjoined to my bladder made radiation therapy much less advisable. Plus my age (79) and relatively low Gleason (3+4, 3+3) < 5%, makes AS the best choice for me right now. For some reason, my PSA declined from 7.67 to 4.06 between last October and April of this year. At this time, I'm doing the periodic checking via PSA, MRI and another biopsy in early 2026. Many considerations! Good luck with your decision, but it is YOUR decision.

REPLY

I mistakenly chose RALP. Nothing has worked right down there since.

REPLY
Profile picture for scottbeammeup @scottbeammeup

I would have still done radiation but would have skipped ADT and taken my chances. I was only on it for six months but now it's a full year later and I'm still having problems and side effects from my testosterone not returning. That's the single thing that makes me angry about the whole experience--I was given minimal information about ADT (you'll have tiredness and hot flashes is all I was told). I suppose part of it is my own fault for trusting my doctor without doing additional research on my own. I was a G7 4+3. In terms of PSA, radiation has knocked it down to .04 which I'm told is good.

Jump to this post

For what it is worth. I'm 4+3, trying to get IRE. I fully intend to go back on TRT when I am cancer free. I found it because under TRT i was getting PSA checked quarterly. I quit TRT for now of course, and my testosterone is down to 18 from 450. Highest PSA 6.5, now that I'm at 18, PSA is .84.

The point of the article is IF and ONLY IF, you have low T, getting back to normal has no effect on cancer or recurrence. My Urologist said this, when I asked him if I could back on TRT. He said, sure, I treat patients with normal T levels all the time!

Shared files

Testo Replacement and PCa Article 4-29-25 (Testo-Replacement-and-PCa-Article-4-29-25.pdf)

REPLY

JayHall, your experience is very encouraging as I will be having my surgery August 13th. Hopefully my outcome will be something I can talk positively about.

REPLY

Well

Like many things, context is relevant...

When I was diagnosed in 2014, imaging was "primitive" and choices were binary:
Surgery
Brachytherapy

Fast forward today, advances in imaging and treatment agents mean many more choices for de novo PCa.

To answer your question, I had RALP, no incontinence, I regained erectile function at around 12 months.

I am 11+ years since diagnosis, surgery, SRT, chemotherapy. ADT, WPLN radiation, SBRT...

Side effects, none.

Kevin

REPLY

Yes, I had surgery and wish I had done radiation. What my urologist told me at the time was that surgery could be done sooner because we’d have to wait for the seeds. What he didn’t tell me was that he could have given me a Lupron injection to stop the growth while we waited on the seeds.

REPLY

As Sinatra sang, regrets I’ve had a few… I had RALP 30 months ago. Supposedly nerve sparing but they’ve never healed and I’m impotent now. Injections work up to a point, but it’s a challenge reaching orgasm through intercourse. As for incontinence I finally conquered it with an implanted sling 6 months ago. I was 0 for 2 on the big recovery issues but I’m still glad I had the surgery. They got it early and I’m confident it’s gone.

REPLY
Please sign in or register to post a reply.