Stopping Nubeqa and Orgovyx after 6 months
Diagnosed with stage 4 PC. Single 4+4 lesion on prostate, two others at 4+3. PET showed small spot on my pelvis and even smaller one on a single lymph node in my pelvic area. PSA 17.
Started ADT 5 months ago and had MRidian SBRT 4 months ago (5 consecutive days).
My PSA has been < .04 for past three months.
Follow up PET showed spot on pelvis and lymph node fully resolved.
When I started on ADT, oncologist told me that he thought 6 months of ADT might be adequate. As most of you guys can attest, ADT is no fun.
I’m worried that my oncologist will tell me that another 6-months would be ideal.
Anyone out there with a similar diagnosis that has only been on ADT for 6 months. If so, how did things work out?
Interested in more discussions like this? Go to the Prostate Cancer Support Group.
Connect

Update…well it’s been a little more than six months since stopping ADT. I received two opinions from respected oncologists (UCLA & MD Anderson). One suggested 6 more months, the other suggested a holiday to see how my PSA would respond. The doc who suggested the holiday maintained that the worse thing that would happen would be a gradual rise in PSA, and a return to ADT with a possible PSMA PET scan.
Here’s what happened to my PSA post ADT. It was undetectable when I stopped:
Month one: .07
Month two: .21
Month three: .21
Month four: .30 (uh oh)
Month five: .24 (hmm)
Month six: .18 (what’s this?!)
Testosterone is now back to 255.
I feel normal again. Libido is back; brain fog, irritability and hot flashes gone, energy back as are my red and white blood cells.
I’m pretty thrilled with this outcome. I have no idea how this will progress, but for now it looks positive.
If there’s one thing I’ve learned from all this, it’s that:
1. Everyone responds differently to treatment regardless of their diagnosis.
2. Competent oncology docs give varying opinions based on the same facts.
3. At the end of the day, you will make the final decision on your treatment protocol.
I will continue updating you all as my ADT-free months progress. I wish you all the best with your treatments!
-
Like -
Helpful -
Hug
6 ReactionsIt’s not unusual for the PSA to rise after stopping ADT and then go back down again. Sounds like you got the best of all options.
Just keep track of your PSA you may go for years. You just never know..
-
Like -
Helpful -
Hug
1 Reaction@jeffmarc thanks Jeff. Seems like the motto for this disease might appropriately be “You just never know…”
-
Like -
Helpful -
Hug
2 Reactions@glabelle said, "You just never know..."
Indeed. Let me riff on this a little!
Look at it from the doctor's point of view, the less you know for certain, the more you guess, and then tend to bias for overtreatment, just in case.
And this happens pretty broadly across medicine, the scenarios are pretty much the same.
So it's a real frontier in medicine - to know more! To develop more testing of all sorts of direct and indirect indicators, to make that testing simpler and cheaper, to link it to genetic profiles.
The hope is that this way testing (and knowing!) replaces overtreatment and with any luck it improves the overall success rate of the entire game.
There are several medical startups, and also many projects in major drug and medical firms, not to mention academic institutions, pushing in these directions. It's also one place where they are experimenting with AI to see if, given enough data that today nobody really knows how to read, the AI can discover patterns that let us know and take better actions.
-
Like -
Helpful -
Hug
1 Reaction@jeffmarc one more comment. In my case, you’ve previously advised against my stopping ADT after 6 months and you’ve supported longer duration ADT…12-18 months. I understand where you’re coming from and a longer duration might be justified for some. But given my experience, might it make sense for men to stop ADT after 6 months (I also had SBRT concurrently) to see if their PSA rise and then fall to an acceptable level for a sustained period? It doesn’t seem like there’s much to lose with this strategy but would like to hear your thoughts.
-
Like -
Helpful -
Hug
1 Reaction@glabelle
What's your Glison level? Was your prostate removed? Are there any metastases? Have you stopped ADT and stopped taking lutamide?
@glabelle
If somebody is a Gleason seven then Stopping ADT after six months is reasonable. If a Gleason eight even NCCN recommends 12 months of ADT.
Besides the Gleason score, you’ve also had metastasis in other spots. Were those spots zapped with SBRT when you had your radiation treatment, Or were they just controlled by ADT? That can make your cancer a lot more aggressive. What’s your doctor think about this? I’m pretty sure most genito urinary oncologists Would recommend 12 months of undetectable PSA before stopping. Has yours remained at < .04 since August?
If you want to get another opinion, come to the ancan.org Weekly advanced prostate cancer meeting next Week on Monday at 8 PM Eastern time. Go to the website and if you sign up, you’ll get a newsletter every week that has some really great stuff in it about the latest treatments in prostate cancer. The guys that run, the meeting have 15 years experience, helping people with their prostate cancer treatment. There’s almost always three or more doctors in the room. You need to install GoTo Meeting on your device, it works on any computer phone or tablet and it’s free. You don’t have to sign up to go to the meeting. You will get advice and information there that nobody else has given you.
@glabelle My thoughts mirror yours. If ADT (I’m on Orgovyx and Nubeqa) are working well enough to get PSA to undetectable within a few months, why not take a drug holiday? It would seem starting again at square one if the PSA starts rising (as it will) should not be a reason for not giving the body a break. Just my opinion. I’m going to ask my doctor if 2 years on ADT has been shown to increase time PSA remains undetectable after treatment is stopped vs. one yeat on ADT.
@denis76 see my details at top of this thread.
-
Like -
Helpful -
Hug
1 Reaction@jeffmarc one core 4+4, one core 4+3, three others 3+3. PSA 17. SBRT performed on prostate and on single lesion on pelvic bone and on single lesion on pelvic lymph node. Prostate not removed. See post ADT cessation monthly PSA on previous post in this thread.
-
Like -
Helpful -
Hug
1 Reaction