It's Official I have Prostate Cancer

Posted by jayhall @jayhall, Feb 14 10:37am

Yesterday I got the results, I have two small lesions. I was given a Gleason score of 8 and typing of 4. Next steps are MRI and PSMA to determine if it's spread. If it's spread Oncologist. If not, removal of the entire Prostate.

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@maxvt

I got my diagnosis March ‘22. 3+4’s and 4+3’s, PSA 19.8. PSMA showed it was confined to the gland. Talked with surgeon and radiologist oncologist. Did tons of research on MayoClinic.org, ClevelandClinic.org and similar, reputable sites, kept all articles in one notebook that was carried to ALL appointments. I knew already that radiation after surgery is a viable option but surgery after radiation is less possible. Also read Dr Patrick Walsh’s book on Surviving Prostate Cancer, very informative and helpful. At least read the highlights beginning every chapter, then read/skip the chapter. I reviewed my notebook with my Urologist (He was thoughtful enough to give me last appointment of the day - we stayed very late) and said I wanted the surgery. He said that with my numbers he would have made the same decision - that gave me relief. I did about two months of Kegel PT with someone specifically trained in PT for PCancer patients and two months after the surgery. ZERO INCONTINENCE. The pathology report indicated a cancer type that would have survived radiation.

You indicated Gleason 8; it’s usually reported as 5+3, or 3+5, which are completely different, and not just 8. The first number, I think, is the aggressive factor. What are your individual numbers?

I wish you all the best and hope you beat this nasty thing.

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My Gleason 8 was 4+4

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I'm the poster child for what happens when you don't do enough kegels. I'm now 13 weeks past surgery and incontinence remains a regular concern for me. The one caveat is that my cancer apparently spread into the bladder neck, which increases leaking.

I'm also annoyed with my urologist. I had my follow-up appointment scheduled for next week, but got a call on Friday that I can delay a week and see an assistant, or wait another 2 months to see the guy who did my surgery. After my Gleason went from 4+3 at the biopsy in July to 4+5 during surgery in November, I'm not in a patient mood.

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A GS 4+4 puts you in high risk.

You may not have the clinical data necessary to make a treatment decision.

The PSMA, MRI are two additional data points.

Other useful data points to share with the group may be any PSA tests you've had and the biopsy report.

With that additional clinical data, you and your medical team will be able to make a better informed decision. I say better because given the dizzying array of choices, nit sure their is an absolute right decision.

That data can also help the members of this forum give their experience as it relates to your clinical data.

I was diagnosed in January 2014. Choices were binary, surgery, brachytherapy.

The CT and MRI "showed nothing" so surgery it was! The MSKCC monogram - https://www.mskcc.org/nomograms/prostate gave me a 30% chance of BCR. That meant 70% chance of not...

18 months later, BCR...

You have several options:

Surgery if the clinical data indicates no spread. I say indicate, it is not guaranteed.

You could discuss doublet or triplet therapy with your medical team if the clinical data indicates spread - https://dailynews.ascopubs.org/do/would-you-use-doublet-therapy-and-not-triplet-therapy-patient-newly-diagnosed-mhspc

Certainly bring a radiologist into the discussion.

Read through the NCCN guidelines too - https://www.nccn.org/guidelines/guidelines-detail?category=1&id=1459

You have gotten good ideas from the others. Keep in mind statistics, Bell Curve, standard deviations, averages....I did not do any kegel exercises, when the catheter came out, zero incontinence! Why, maybe the skill of the surgeon?

Kevin

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@anosmic1

I'm the poster child for what happens when you don't do enough kegels. I'm now 13 weeks past surgery and incontinence remains a regular concern for me. The one caveat is that my cancer apparently spread into the bladder neck, which increases leaking.

I'm also annoyed with my urologist. I had my follow-up appointment scheduled for next week, but got a call on Friday that I can delay a week and see an assistant, or wait another 2 months to see the guy who did my surgery. After my Gleason went from 4+3 at the biopsy in July to 4+5 during surgery in November, I'm not in a patient mood.

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I never did any kegels before or after surgery. Really had no incontinence to speak of either, At least for eight years after surgery.

Everybody’s different.

At this point, your urologist is really not the guy you want to see. You’re done with urology you have to move onto oncology to get the proper treatment.

You have a Gleason nine that is very aggressive. You want to get yourself to a center of excellence or a Genito urinary oncologist to guide your future treatment.

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@anosmic1

I'm the poster child for what happens when you don't do enough kegels. I'm now 13 weeks past surgery and incontinence remains a regular concern for me. The one caveat is that my cancer apparently spread into the bladder neck, which increases leaking.

I'm also annoyed with my urologist. I had my follow-up appointment scheduled for next week, but got a call on Friday that I can delay a week and see an assistant, or wait another 2 months to see the guy who did my surgery. After my Gleason went from 4+3 at the biopsy in July to 4+5 during surgery in November, I'm not in a patient mood.

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It sounds like your issue is more complex and kegels may not have been effective or may have needed to be done for quite a while before things correct.

Don’t be hard on yourself, there are things that can be done to correct heavy incontinence, from medications to surgical solutions.

I had a very good surgeon who used an unusual technique on me, one usually only done after there is stress incontinence and is proven to be 95%+ effective - since he was in there already it made sense for him to do that. I also did kegels and hammered my core for 4 months before surgery. I walked away with no incontinence nor any ED, it could be the work, could be the surgeon, could be luck.

Don’t kick yourself, I think luck of the draw in cancer is pretty common.

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@survivor5280

The number I do and the number you do are sure to be different. You could start with three sets of 10 reps and see how you feel - just always give yourself time at the top to fully release the pelvic floor so that means slowing the movement down to allow for long engagement followed by long release. 3x10 will probably wear your floor out if you do them a bit slower. I wouldn't worry about reps, just add weight to make them more difficult.

As for weights, I said to ADD weight, not GAIN it :). Gain weight if you want, but hopefully it's muscles and not Honey Buns! For me I hold a 30-50lb kettlebell while I do squats.

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Thank you for your guidance. Very insightful.

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@hmishkind

Phil

I am a fighter and plan to make sure that the surgeon does not sit back and expect that I follow their protocol. I am done playing nice in the sandbox and am going to insist on a meeting with a GU oncologist, whether at Mayo or elsewhere to get on the road to life. I agree, I am not a bystander. Thank you for your words of encouragement . Be well. I plan to turn 70 in April and and will not wait for any microscopic prostate cancer cells to ruin my birthday. 🙂

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I think you are on the right track - taking an active role in your treatment, educating yourself, willingness to change facilities, willingness to understand, and if necessary, challenge those recommendations. Mayo advertises thier comprehensive team approach to care, but that never happened. I saw a urologist who insisted surgery was the only option for my G9 PC. I was referred by my surgeon to a Mayo RO, but during that appointment, I had to update her about my situation as it was clear my case had never been discussed with her. I had likely BCR 3 months after surgery and confirmation 6 weeks later with a PSADT of < 3 months. I had a PSMA PET scan confirming matastisis. At the follow-up appointment with my surgeon, stage 4 was confirmed, a referral to an RO was made, and I was told to check in with him 6 months later. No ADT was started and no referral to a MO or GU Oncologist was made, despite my request. When I met with the RO, she said ADT & AR & IMRT were needed immediately (the fact is they should have been started 10 weeks earlier) . She started me on Eligard. After considering the issues, I decided to move my care to The University of New Mexico Comprehensive Cancer Center. I was immediately seen by a GU Oncologist who spent an hour with me, answered all my questions, and added abiraterone w/prednisone and recommeded I start 45 sessions of IMRT when my PSA drops below 0.5. I feel like I'm now getting the comprehensive care that I had expected at Mayo. I want to state clearly that I have no competency complaints about my Mayo surgeon, radiation oncologist, or any other staff. Mayo is a wonderful facility, well staffed, and very state of the art. My concern/complaint was the lack of comprehensive coordinated care I thought I would get and the rushed nature of some appointments where I had questions but could feel the surgeon needing to move on. It is worth remembering, each of us is ultimately responsible for our own care and is our own best advocate.

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@jayhall

My Gleason 8 was 4+4

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WOW, that's not good.

I saw another reply that incontinence, or lack of, may be linked to the surgeon. I am not knowledgeable enough to expound on that. BUT, as I did my post-op PT, the person indicated to me she has two other clients who were 6+ months after surgery who still had incontinence issues - neither had done pre-op PT. That's another reason why I recommend it.

Still, the best of luck to you.

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I'm a huge advocate for pre-op PT. I spent 4 months physically preparing for surgery because it's literally the only part of the treatment that I had a modicum of control over and, by God, I was going to control what I could. I think that has led to a better than expected recovery for me.

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@stevemaggart

I think you are on the right track - taking an active role in your treatment, educating yourself, willingness to change facilities, willingness to understand, and if necessary, challenge those recommendations. Mayo advertises thier comprehensive team approach to care, but that never happened. I saw a urologist who insisted surgery was the only option for my G9 PC. I was referred by my surgeon to a Mayo RO, but during that appointment, I had to update her about my situation as it was clear my case had never been discussed with her. I had likely BCR 3 months after surgery and confirmation 6 weeks later with a PSADT of < 3 months. I had a PSMA PET scan confirming matastisis. At the follow-up appointment with my surgeon, stage 4 was confirmed, a referral to an RO was made, and I was told to check in with him 6 months later. No ADT was started and no referral to a MO or GU Oncologist was made, despite my request. When I met with the RO, she said ADT & AR & IMRT were needed immediately (the fact is they should have been started 10 weeks earlier) . She started me on Eligard. After considering the issues, I decided to move my care to The University of New Mexico Comprehensive Cancer Center. I was immediately seen by a GU Oncologist who spent an hour with me, answered all my questions, and added abiraterone w/prednisone and recommeded I start 45 sessions of IMRT when my PSA drops below 0.5. I feel like I'm now getting the comprehensive care that I had expected at Mayo. I want to state clearly that I have no competency complaints about my Mayo surgeon, radiation oncologist, or any other staff. Mayo is a wonderful facility, well staffed, and very state of the art. My concern/complaint was the lack of comprehensive coordinated care I thought I would get and the rushed nature of some appointments where I had questions but could feel the surgeon needing to move on. It is worth remembering, each of us is ultimately responsible for our own care and is our own best advocate.

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That’s a terrible and unfortunate story, Steve - NEVER should have happened. But fear not, ALL of the vaunted cancer institutes we always recommend have similar horror stories.
I met a nice guy during salvage therapy who had surgery at Sloan and when his PSA started to climb his surgeon told him not to worry since he was “cured”. His next 3 month PSA was even higher - but guess what? - his surgeon had left Sloan ( or got booted) and when the patient tracked him down to his new hospital he refused to speak with him and it got ugly in the waiting room - this is Long Island, OK? Shit happens!😄
So he goes back to Sloan for a consult and the RO couldn’t believe his ex-colleague told him he was cured when his post op PSA was like .7…
It’s a minefield out there and it’s hard to know where to plant your feet sometimes.
Glad you had the presence of mind to know you were being jerked around and found a better facility.
Phil

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