My husband's PSA rose after two Lupron treatments. Thoughts?
My husband’s psa rose to 6.4 after two lupron treatments. We are being referred to a medical oncologist and pet scan. Wondering if anybody has experienced this or has treatment advice. Thanks!
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@johndavis60
It’s not Firmagon specifically that makes a difference. Any ADT to which they add an ARPI like Zytiga will delay the time it takes to become castrate resistant.
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3 Reactions@johndavis60 There are no guarantees, but hopefully it will. The LATITUDE trial show a significant improvement in overall survival for patients with high-burden (polymetastatic) castrate-sensitive PCa starting Abiraterone and Prednisone at the same time as ADT, and part of the huge, multi-track STAMPEDE trial showed that the benefit extends to patients with low-burden (oligometastatic) castrate-sensitive PCa as well.
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2 ReactionsThat is encouraging- thank you!
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1 Reaction@northoftheborder the only thing that I’d like to comment on regards the phrase “incurable”. Too many places give up prematurely. I’m realistic about the challenges but have no interest in doctors that toss out that term and quit trying to cure. It’s their job unless they specialize in palliative care.
Great point - totally agree.
@zmarkv Yes, 100%. Parkinson's, diabetes, and HIV are all likewise incurable, but that doesn't prevent the medical community from *managing* them so that people can often live out the full terms of their natural lives.
With the latest treatments and medications, many advanced prostate cancer cases (especially oligometastatic cases) are either at that point or very close now, but unfortunately not all practioners have shifted their focus yet from short-term palliative care to long-term disease management.
That means we have to advocate for ourselves assertively. I was very sick, post-surgery, paralysed, and in emotional shock when I got my stage 4 diagnosis out of the blue in 2021, but the most important thing I did was tell the oncology team that I was ready to fight, hard. That freed them from any ethical concerns they might have had about giving me harsh, "curative-intent" treatments. They promised to "throw the kitchen sink at it," and they have.
p.s. That doesn't mean a patient is wrong to choose purely palliative care, especially if they're very elderly or have other diseases, but it should be a choice offered to the patient, not a choice made for them.
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6 ReactionsYayyy for you! Keep fighting- so glad for you that it is working!
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