@jeffmarc
\\ I attend nine advanced prostate cancer online meetings every month so I hear from a lot of people
Jeff, why do you think, in the same situations (age, Gleason score, stage) and with roughly the same treatment, metastases grow in some people, while in others they simply remain dormant? What influencing factors would you identify? For example: place of residence, physical activity, diet, obesity, immune system characteristics, certain body factors (for example, prolactinin and insulin compete with testosterone), anything that interferes with testosterone synthesis, and other factors. Which of these are significant for creating a map of recommendations on what should be done and what, conversely, should not be done?
This information needs to be somehow classified, processed, and analyzed, and I think that if conclusions were drawn from this analysis, it would be valuable for those who are sick. There are no universal methods, but there are general patterns.
In my life, I've met people who had recovered from late-stage cancer, and when I asked (I've been very curious since childhood) what they did, they said that first of all, they stopped being nervous, let go of resentments, and started moving frequently, because blood is the river of life, and it is it that brings possible salvation.
I lived life to the fullest, but now I'm so crushed and sad that I've become very withdrawn and gloomy. This suddenly befell me due to a doctor's mistake, who missed important tests. I used to be obsessed with revenge, but lately I've taken the blame. It's hard to understand when nothing indicates a problem and then suddenly it appears with frequent trips to the bathroom.
@denis76
Interesting you should ask this right now. I just found an article about how cancer becomes dormant and what Medical people are doing to try to investigate it. You can read most of the article without signing in. Somebody just passed this information in email to me today.
This is the most comprehensive information I’ve seen about how cancer becomes dormant, and what happens to it when it does become dormant.
https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-025-04149-3