When I had BCR after surgery, my urologist and radiologist said I should do SRT to the prostate bed. I had done some homework and data was emerging about location of recurrence in high grade PCa with clinical history such as mine, PSADT, GS, time to BCR...
That data indicated the spread was more often than not in the PLNs and the radiation treatment field should be extended to include the PLN system and six months ADT.
My urologist and radiologist said no, there wasn't long term data to support that...! I acquiesced, 90 days after the SRT to the prostate bed only, my radiologist turned to me and said "Kevin, your PSA is .7, it was .3. SRT failed..."
From that point on, I vowed that any treatment decision would be made jointly but I would have the 51% say. So, when my urologist and a 2nd one said monotherapy, ADT, for lifetime, I said no, triplet therapy. That brought 4-1/2 years off treatment. This go around, same, doublet therapy for a defined period, if clinical data supports, stop, actively monitor.
Kevin
Such good advice, you must be an advocate your your personal health and understand the numbers. Before retiring from the corporate world, I was working/traveling constantly. I went to my PCP annually to get my full physical. Each year she said everything looks great, you are good to go. I simply trusted and believed what she was saying, not even looking at the actual data. After retiring, I started to look into my health and decided I wanted to improve my diet and get off the statin that I was on. I went to a cardiovascular management team and met with a family friend. She reviewed my complete file and at the end of the appointment, asked me if I was addressing my prostate problem. I asked, what prostate problem? From there, I immediately did research and got an appointment at Mayo-Rochester. In the end, Gleason Score 7 (4/3), chose Radical prostatectomy, all clear 1 year later.
The lesson to be learned from my experience, you cannot just rely on your doctor to manage your healthcare. There is a lot of incompetence, lack of caring, and human error in the medical field. As Kujhawk1978 said, its your health and you must manage it with at least 51% of control.
Also, I would recommend not taking the risk of treating prostate cancer at a local hospital. You should definitely go to a center of excellence such as Mayo-Rochester.
Have a great day,
Jim