Decipher risk: prostatectomy RP vs radiation.

Posted by fritzo @fritzo, Feb 12 6:08am

Hi everyone,

I was considering radiation therapy vs. surgery, so my radiation oncologist ordered a Decipher test. My Decipher test results came back at .61, which crosses the threshold from intermediate risk to high risk, meaning radiation would include six months of hormone therapy.

Since I was deciding between RP radical prostatectomy vs. radiation, it seems to me that I definitely need to get the cancer out via surgery vs. doing radiation first. I can't imagine starting with radiation as first course for treatment for me at age 63 in otherwise good health, with 3+4=7 contained Pc.

It sounds like it is rare for most to have Decipher test information prior to a RP since it is a tool for accessing radiation options. . But, my guess is that means the surgeons will be more aggressive in surgery with that knowledge of high risk cells.

Big question: Do you know what I can expect from surgery if they are more vigilant with removal since they would know in advance that the cells are more aggressive?

Guessing nerve sparing is less likely. Not sure if that extends to the bladder neck and stuff like that?

Side note: A big factor I look at in my decision making for surgery vs. radiation is if there is recurrence, what are the salvage treatment options. If I have surgery, than I retain the option for salvage radiation (which looks like it would include hormone therapy). If I do radiation first and there is recurrence, than it's lifelong hormone therapy, which sounds like it doesn't blast the cancer, it just delays it. So, that tells me that surgery is my best first option.

Thanks for your help!

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

Profile picture for fritzo @fritzo

@brianjarvis
So much information condensed like it's a radiation users guide. This is a huge resource and I'm very thankful. I've been trying to piece this all together.

Proton Beam: Funny, I wondered if the nearest center wouldn't handle my case because they treat all cancers and would be overloaded. But, that looks to be an advantage.

Spacer: Yeah, I was definitely going to demand that and it was in the local protocol

Hormone therapy combination: That is super usefill information as well.

And then you close with a free genetic test – mind blown! Thank you so much

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@fritzo While it's true that proton radiation is generally safer than conventional photon radiation it is not always the best choice for every prostate cancer situation. I learned from this post https://connect.mayoclinic.org/discussion/pc-treatment-prostatectomy-or-proton-beam-therapy/ by @jesse65 that there are situations where photon radiation is the better choice.

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Profile picture for brianjarvis @brianjarvis

@wwsmith Instead of nomograms, men might even have to seek out one-by-one individual clinical trials like COMPPARE, PARTIQoL, ProtectT, FLAME and many others that look at each of the treatment types or treatment methods, compares them, and then publishes the data. That may entail looking through dozens (hundreds?) of clinical trials for the one(s) that might apply to one’s specific diagnostic situation.

As just one example, in 2023 the results of the ProtectT trial (https://www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/NEJMoa2214122) came out comparing external radiation (IMRT w/ADT) against both surgery and active surveillance, and found that survival rates comparing surgery with radiation are statistically equivalent no matter what treatment chosen (and that active surveillance was actually only statistically a little worse), and that the treatment decision is mainly decided on side-effects and quality-of-life (or as that paper concludes, “… the choice of therapy involves weighing trade-offs between benefits and harms associated with treatments for localized prostate cancer.”).

And even the ProtectT trial results I would supplement with more research because ProtectT looked at men who were treated between 1999-2009, well before today’s next-generation imaging techniques, and modern diagnostic tools and treatments were available. (I first heard about that report on the evening news (https://www.nbcnews.com/news/amp/rcna74512), and then had to do some serious digging to find the trial report: ProtectT.)

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@brianjarvis
There is one important thing to be aware of in clinical trials.

There are usually two groups one that gets the drug and one that gets a placebo. In some cases, those trials are not good for people because they need treatment not a placebo. Some trials have actually been found so effective that they’ve given the people that were on placebo‘s the drug, But that is not the normal case.

Just be aware of this possibility if you are signing up for a clinical trial.

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Profile picture for jeff Marchi @jeffmarc

@brianjarvis
There is one important thing to be aware of in clinical trials.

There are usually two groups one that gets the drug and one that gets a placebo. In some cases, those trials are not good for people because they need treatment not a placebo. Some trials have actually been found so effective that they’ve given the people that were on placebo‘s the drug, But that is not the normal case.

Just be aware of this possibility if you are signing up for a clinical trial.

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@jeffmarc While it is always worthwhile to view results from afar of a clinical trial, it is not always worthwhile to be a participant in one. I am very glad to this day that I just missed out on being a participant in a trial testing SBRT for wide area low dose applications that IMRT is typically used for. That trial had to be stopped early because of high toxicity. SBRT is so controllable that a program will eventually be worked out that allows SBRT to be used like IMRT for wide area low dose applications.

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Profile picture for jeff Marchi @jeffmarc

@brianjarvis
There is one important thing to be aware of in clinical trials.

There are usually two groups one that gets the drug and one that gets a placebo. In some cases, those trials are not good for people because they need treatment not a placebo. Some trials have actually been found so effective that they’ve given the people that were on placebo‘s the drug, But that is not the normal case.

Just be aware of this possibility if you are signing up for a clinical trial.

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@jeffmarc Often, clinical trials compare standard of care against a new promising procedure or combination of promising procedures (rather than just against a placebo).

Where they may use a placebo is when they are doing an “add-on” study, like where a placebo is used in combination with a current standard of care (e.g., ADT) to evaluate the efficacy of a new drug (e.g., ARPI).

For example, there’s a study (MAGNITUDE trial) comparing Zytiga/prednisone + niraparib against Zytiga/prednisone + placebo. Zytiga/prednisone is standard of care in both cases; no one is getting a placebo alone.

I was offered the opportunity to be part of a clinical trial; I opted out of that opportunity. Though I understood the purpose and possible future value of a clinical trial, my attention was singularly focused on treating my disease. I did however choose to have my proton radiation treatment results submitted into a registry (https://clinicaltrials.gov/study/NCT02040467). Hopefully, that will help someone make a treatment decision one day.

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I do not think that surgeons will take the Decipher into account when deciding on nerve-sparing. That will be driven by the Gleason score, the MRI images and what they see during surgery.

Your decision between surgery and radiation, as has been mentioned, should mainly depend on whether the cancer is likely still contained inside the organ, tilting the decision towards surgery (with nerve-sparing) or if there is a high probability of ECE or further spread, which would move the needle towards RT.

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Thanks-I'm now realizing that Decipher really is a tool for radiology to access whether they need to add hormone therapy or not. In my case, if I did radiaiton, yes I would.

For surgery, with no spread on the imaging, it looks like options are potentially still open for nerve sparing surgery. If there was spread, I guess radiaiton would be the way the go.

I'm also seeing that surgical internal sphincter/ bladder neck area rebuild areas are big determinants of continence down the road. Guessing that's a surgical decision as they get in there.

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Profile picture for wwsmith @wwsmith

@jeffmarc While it is always worthwhile to view results from afar of a clinical trial, it is not always worthwhile to be a participant in one. I am very glad to this day that I just missed out on being a participant in a trial testing SBRT for wide area low dose applications that IMRT is typically used for. That trial had to be stopped early because of high toxicity. SBRT is so controllable that a program will eventually be worked out that allows SBRT to be used like IMRT for wide area low dose applications.

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@wwsmith
My wife was diagnosed with a serious lung disease years ago that had very few treatment options. I remember at the conference, lots of patients were seeking out multiple drug trials that they hoped would be the new cure. But, like you say, you need to treat your disease with what you know works, not on a hope and prayer.

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Profile picture for fritzo @fritzo

Thanks-I'm now realizing that Decipher really is a tool for radiology to access whether they need to add hormone therapy or not. In my case, if I did radiaiton, yes I would.

For surgery, with no spread on the imaging, it looks like options are potentially still open for nerve sparing surgery. If there was spread, I guess radiaiton would be the way the go.

I'm also seeing that surgical internal sphincter/ bladder neck area rebuild areas are big determinants of continence down the road. Guessing that's a surgical decision as they get in there.

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@fritzo Even our current best prostate cancer scanning technology, the PSMA PET scan, is still very weak in that the smallest cancer cell cluster it can see is 2mm which requires 8 million cancer cells to create. Given this situation, it is very easy for some cancer escape to have already occurred and not be seen. Without definitive proof of escape, we are left with evaluating a lot of indirect clues towards the possibility that escape has already occurred.

The more you have of these high risk factors, the more likely that escape has already occurred. High Decipher score, intraductal, cribriform, seminal vesicle invasion, perineural invasion, extraprostatic extension (EPE), extracapsular extension (ECE), and even just lesions that abut the capsule wall. In my own case, I had a high Decipher score (0.81) and two lesions that abutted the capsule wall. The high Decipher score and the two capsule abutting lesions suggested that I needed more ADT than normal with radiation and that's why I had to use one year of ADT with just a contained 3+4 case.

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Ahhhh-so looks like I'll need to get the doctors to order the various gene tests. Thanks for that update

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Profile picture for wwsmith @wwsmith

@brianjarvis One thing I like about looking at clinical results from recent trials is that you get to have an early indication at how the standard of care (SOC) for various situations is likely to evolve going forward. The SOC changes slowly and is listed in the NCCN Guidelines here https://www.nccn.org/guidelines/guidelines-detail

If a doctor and patient always waited to use new treatment strategies only until after a strategy had made it into the NCCN guidelines, there would be many missed opportunities on obtaining the benefit of the new approach. As such, both doctors and patients should be aware of relevant recent studies to see whether the clinical results are promising enough to go ahead and apply to their own current cases.

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@wwsmith I guess it's all about keeping on top of published clinical trials. Fortunately, seems like searches turn up all kinds of Prostate trial reports.

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