Open main menu ☰
HealingWell
Search Close Search
Health Conditions
Allergies Alzheimer's Disease Anxiety & Panic Disorders Arthritis Breast Cancer Chronic Illness Crohn's Disease Depression Diabetes
Fibromyalgia GERD & Acid Reflux Irritable Bowel Syndrome Lupus Lyme Disease Migraine Headache Multiple Sclerosis Prostate Cancer Ulcerative Colitis

View Conditions A to Z »
Support Forums
Anxiety & Panic Disorders Bipolar Disorder Breast Cancer Chronic Pain Crohn's Disease Depression Diabetes Fibromyalgia GERD & Acid Reflux
Hepatitis Irritable Bowel Syndrome Lupus Lyme Disease Multiple Sclerosis Ostomies Prostate Cancer Rheumatoid Arthritis Ulcerative Colitis

View Forums A to Z »
Log In
Join Us
Close main menu ×
  • Home
  • Health Conditions
    • All Conditions
    • Allergies
    • Alzheimer's Disease
    • Anxiety & Panic Disorders
    • Arthritis
    • Breast Cancer
    • Chronic Illness
    • Crohn's Disease
    • Depression
    • Diabetes
    • Fibromyalgia
    • GERD & Acid Reflux
    • Irritable Bowel Syndrome
    • Lupus
    • Lyme Disease
    • Migraine Headache
    • Multiple Sclerosis
    • Prostate Cancer
    • Ulcerative Colitis
  • Support Forums
    • All Forums
    • Anxiety & Panic Disorders
    • Bipolar Disorder
    • Breast Cancer
    • Chronic Pain
    • Crohn's Disease
    • Depression
    • Diabetes
    • Fibromyalgia
    • GERD & Acid Reflux
    • Hepatitis
    • Irritable Bowel Syndrome
    • Lupus
    • Lyme Disease
    • Multiple Sclerosis
    • Ostomies
    • Prostate Cancer
    • Rheumatoid Arthritis
    • Ulcerative Colitis
  • Log In
  • Join Us
Join Us
☰
Forum Home| Forum Rules| Moderators| Active Topics| Help| Log In

Does anyone else regret having surgery? I do!

Support Forums
>
Prostate Cancer
✚ New Topic ✚ Reply
1 2 3 45
❬ ❬ Previous Thread |Next Thread ❭ ❭
profile picture
PeterDisAbelard.
Forum Moderator
Joined : Jul 2012
Posts : 6408
Posted 9/4/2017 5:18 PM (GMT -8)
For those of you who have already made your decision and been treated and now you have regrets, be sure to modulate your regret so you only beat yourself up over the parts for which you had any effective control. If you are in the bleachers watching a baseball game and you are stuck by a meteor it is silly to beat yourself up for not sitting in a different seat.

We had a recent thread that talked about a study that compared the side effect loads of different types of treatment. The most salient point was that for ED the results for surgery were much worse than some of the other treatment options, notably the newer forms of radiation. But the other thing I noticed was that none of the treatments had results that struck me as particularly good. The treatments with the best results were still something like 50/50 for avoiding ED. So, assuming that you needed the treatment, 50 percent of your chances for keeping Mr Happy happy were gone when you were diagnosed -- nothing you could do, like getting struck by that meteor. You only get to beat yourself up for the difference between the results for your choice of treatment and the results for the best treatment available at the time.

So, for those of us who chose surgery and now have to deal with ED, our choice of treatment appears to have something like a 30/70 chance of avoiding ED so we gave up 20 percent compared to the best available. That means that our ED is two parts bad decision making for choosing surgery to five parts sh:tty luck to have been diagnosed with prostate cancer. We should beat ourselves up accordingly.
profile picture
mattam
Veteran Member
Joined : Aug 2015
Posts : 3991
Posted 9/4/2017 5:49 PM (GMT -8)
Do I regret having had a RP? For me it is a little complicated and there isn't a simple answer. Had surgery cured me of cancer, or even delayed biochemical recurrence for five years, it would have been worth it. As it turns out, I probably already had micro mets at the time of surgery. So, in that respect, I do regret the surgery. Had the surgery cured me, the terrible side effects would have been worth it, but I would still probably be grumbling about the side effects...lol.

Having said all that, I'm not sure selecting primary RT would have made me feel any better. Obviously, since I was micro metastatic at that time, there wasn't any curative treatment. At the time of treatment I was having serious urine flow issues and primary RT might have aggravated that problem, so I would still not be cured and I might have had big issues with peeing. I am convinced that if I had done primary RT instead of surgery, I would have spent the rest of my life assuming that the mets resulted from a failure in that therapy, rather than the fact that I already had mets.

I still feel like the RP was the correct decision based on the information available at the time. The only bright spot with my treatment is that at least the primary tumor was debulked. The idea that debulking the primary tumor slows down mets seems to be gaining traction.
profile picture
lifeguyd
Veteran Member
Joined : Jul 2006
Posts : 691
Posted 9/4/2017 8:02 PM (GMT -8)
There are some experts who are saying that prostate surgery is a dead horse. Because of newer and better treatments, surgery should no longer be considered. If a man has a higher Gleason he will more than likely need further treatment after surgery. So they suggest eliminating the surgery and going right to the advanced treatments.
If a man has a lower Gleason, surgery is probable over treatment. So other treatments are more appropriate. urologists who perform prostate surgery are unlikely to agree with this suggestion.
profile picture
Jazzman1
Veteran Member
Joined : Sep 2010
Posts : 1196
Posted 9/5/2017 6:49 AM (GMT -8)
I wouldn't say I regret having had surgery. I can't know what would have happened if I'd gone another way.

I do regret not having had a more open mind about my options. I should have talked to more doctors about other treatment options. But as they say, you don't get a do-over.
profile picture
RCS
Veteran Member
Joined : Dec 2009
Posts : 1348
Posted 9/5/2017 7:28 AM (GMT -8)
I agree with lifeguard, treatments for PCa have advanced quite a bit since I was diagnosed. AS and SBRT have come a long way and seem to be the new gold standards for G6 ...... or at least heading in that direction. We did not have a Cyberknife machine in Denver when I was making my choices.

Things I liked about my surgery,
1.) I can now urinate at will ..... pre-surgery I could stand at a urinal for a long time and nothing would happen ..... tough at a ball game with a line behin you. Nice to sleep through the night.
2.) It was nice getting a pathology report and knowing what I had.
3.) My insurance covered the procedure. At the time I was on Kaiser and they would cover only surgery or brachytherapy. Because of the size of my prostate they would need to shrink it with hormones before they could nuke it, and they would give no assurances that the hormones would shrink it adequately ..... therefore, surgery.

All in all I've been through worse .... guess I got lucky.
profile picture
bdubs60647
Regular Member
Joined : Feb 2017
Posts : 36
Posted 9/5/2017 7:58 AM (GMT -8)
Thanks for your post. I read it when I was first diagnosed and it encouraged me to research all available treatments. I also seriously contemplated the quality vs quantity of life question more thoroughly.

I was G7 (3+4) and G6. I chose a treatment path that had minimal projected side effects but is still questionable on long term outcomes.

Thank you for your honesty and candor.
profile picture
RobLee
Veteran Member
Joined : Apr 2017
Posts : 1488
Posted 9/5/2017 8:33 AM (GMT -8)
I considered all options. None was a clear winner. Given my situation, surgery had the highest score. I was having issues that I would not want to be forced to deal with for the rest of my life. Any form of radiation could have left me with similar SE's or a different set of SE's. As it turns out I needed RT post-op anyway. I do not regret that. At least now we know exactly what we're shooting at. Possible mets down the road? Probably just as likely with or without primary RT.

Incontinence was inconvenient, but the primary reason for getting the AUS was to allow me to proceed with ART. And ED is probably due just as much if not more to HT than RP. Little Peter wasn't doing that well before surgery anyway, and wasn't worth trying to resurrect him while killing my larger myself. A small price to pay.

No, no regrets, other than wishing my first biopsy had been positive. I had hoped it would be.
Everything else would have been much simpler.
profile picture
InTheShop
Elite Member
Joined : Jan 2012
Posts : 11468
Posted 9/5/2017 8:58 AM (GMT -8)
interesting. Reviving a four year old thread and beating the horse dead again.

Interesting the energy people have on this subject.

Andrew
profile picture
MK1965
Regular Member
Joined : Jun 2016
Posts : 193
Posted 9/5/2017 9:48 AM (GMT -8)
I know for sure, it is many more people who regretted RP but the do not want to acknowledge it. Mistake is mistake and no one should be ashamed to acknowledge it. I am sure it is not just me, myself and I who feel it and coming fort with regrets.
I already acknowledged it to friends, family, my wife and daughters and to everyone who asked me anything about my prostate Ca and surgery.
I stated it clearly that surgery ruined my life, my best years when I could and should enjoy everything what life is offering.
I hope somebody else will make confession and let his frustrations to be known to prostate Ca world.
MK
profile picture
NKinney
Veteran Member
Joined : Oct 2013
Posts : 1159
Posted 9/5/2017 11:07 AM (GMT -8)
MK1965: VIEW IMAGE
profile picture
MK1965
Regular Member
Joined : Jun 2016
Posts : 193
Posted 9/5/2017 11:13 AM (GMT -8)
NKinney,
Don't understand your picture message.
profile picture
NKinney
Veteran Member
Joined : Oct 2013
Posts : 1159
Posted 9/5/2017 11:18 AM (GMT -8)
MK1965, I was merely poking at the "privileged" comments which preceded yours...and thought you would probably agree.

Privilege is when you think something is not a problem because it's not a problem to you personally.
profile picture
142
Veteran Member
Joined : Jan 2010
Posts : 7298
Posted 9/5/2017 11:28 AM (GMT -8)
Yet another Zombie thread come back to life.

I do think that horse has been beaten into dust here.
profile picture
garyi
Veteran Member
Joined : Jun 2017
Posts : 2244
Posted 9/5/2017 11:35 AM (GMT -8)

NKinney said...
MK1965, I was merely poking at the "privileged" comments which preceded yours...and thought you would probably agree.

Privilege is when you think something is not a problem because it's not a problem to you personally.

Or thinking it is a problem because it's a problem for you.

profile picture
BillyBob@388
Veteran Member
Joined : Mar 2014
Posts : 4855
Posted 9/5/2017 12:05 PM (GMT -8)

garyi said...
NKinney said...
MK1965, I was merely poking at the "privileged" comments which preceded yours...and thought you would probably agree.

Privilege is when you think something is not a problem because it's not a problem to you personally.Or thinking it is a problem because it's a problem for you.

So what are we saying with "Or thinking it is a problem because it's a problem for you"? That never having sexual pleasure again, or urinating while trying to do so, or being shrunk, or being bent, or some combination of all of the above and a few other things thrown in, maybe along with wet pants unless you finally have surgery for that after a couple of years trying to deal with it, is not actually a problem? I'm thinking even manly men, if they have those issues, are going to consider it a problem. And not just because it is a problem for them, but because it is a problem. And virtually every one who suffers it is going to call it a problem. Those that don't have those problems, I would also think it is a problem and give endless thanks that they don't have it.

Now it might be that that is the price the people have to pay so as to not die of PC in a few years or a bunch of years down the road. In which case, if you want to live, you do what is needed, suck it up and go on your way. But that might also be a question to be debated: Is it really the price that must be paid?
profile picture
garyi
Veteran Member
Joined : Jun 2017
Posts : 2244
Posted 9/5/2017 12:32 PM (GMT -8)
What I am saying BillyBob, is that those horrible side effects are a life altering problem. But I don't know how many, what %, of those who had surgery suffer from them, nor for that matter, how many who undergo radiation have serious, life altering, side effects also.

What I do know is that these forums are far from a normal distribution of people who have been treated, and many who have been here a long time seems to have the worst of symptoms, which seems understandable to me.

I'm also suggesting that if the purpose of this forum is to help new folks understand what they are up against and make a reasonable intervention selection, maybe a more even handed approach wouldn't scare them off any particular treatment choice. As you say, maybe "sucking it up", without repeatedly reinforcing the most dire of consequences, although I can empathize with your frustrations, would be a more constructive approach.

For your consideration.....

Post Edited (garyi) : 9/5/2017 2:35:20 PM (GMT-6)

profile picture
mattam
Veteran Member
Joined : Aug 2015
Posts : 3991
Posted 9/5/2017 12:32 PM (GMT -8)
I don't really think the horse has been beaten to death because we have seen several guys express things they want to get off their chests. That's part of the support that goes with the forum, IMHO.
profile picture
NKinney
Veteran Member
Joined : Oct 2013
Posts : 1159
Posted 9/5/2017 2:35 PM (GMT -8)
I had no regrets, at first.



garyi wrote: "But I don't know how many, what %, of those who had surgery suffer from them..."

You are right. The exact count is not known. Probably because someone not having sex after treatment is not as big an issue to some men as it is to others, or not having as good a quality of sex after treatment is not as big an issue to some men as it is to others. But it's a big issue for many men. Is it tens of thousands, or hundreds of thousands of men? The exact count is not known. What we do know, however, is that it's enough for there to be a slew of books, articles and QoL studies.

It's a significant and very current issue for men. I can think of no reason that it would be considered less relevant for today's participants as it was for the HealingWell participants from 4 years ago.
profile picture
dude1969
Regular Member
Joined : Jul 2011
Posts : 438
Posted 9/5/2017 3:30 PM (GMT -8)
So I see ChrisR's thread of old has been resurrected! Excellent. Maybe not...

All of us have regrets. Maybe the most important thing for a G6 or low grade G7 to remember more than others is that you have time to make a treatment decision. I'm not saying that to cast a shadow on surgery, which was my and ChrisR's decision at Hopkins. I'm saying it as a general rule...... there is time in that circumstance to make a decision.

As for regrets, we all have them. I would have liked to have waited another year or 5 before having surgery. I would have STILL had surgery and by the same guy that operated on me. My decision was complicated by a young wife, two young kids, and a bun in the oven at the time of diagnosis. ChrisR was is a similar situation, as I recall, when he made the initial decision. Present circumstances dictate responses in the present. He had other situations that made him regret his course of action... life circumstances that almost negated his initial thought processes.

In fairness to him, and everyone else experiencing regrets, please don't turn this thread, which is an excellent resource for weighing options, into something more than that.

ChrisR is a terrific person. He'll have to fill you in how it has turned out. He doesn't come by as much as he used to, sadly.

This is an excellent thread.
profile picture
BillyBob@388
Veteran Member
Joined : Mar 2014
Posts : 4855
Posted 9/5/2017 7:50 PM (GMT -8)

garyi said...
What I am saying BillyBob, is that those horrible side effects are a life altering problem. But I don't know how many, what %, of those who had surgery suffer from them, nor for that matter, how many who undergo radiation have serious, life altering, side effects also.

What I do know is that these forums are far from a normal distribution of people who have been treated, and many who have been here a long time seems to have the worst of symptoms, which seems understandable to me.

I'm also suggesting that if the purpose of this forum is to help new folks understand what they are up against and make a reasonable intervention selection, maybe a more even handed approach wouldn't scare them off any particular treatment choice. As you say, maybe "sucking it up", without repeatedly reinforcing the most dire of consequences, although I can empathize with your frustrations, would be a more constructive approach.

For your consideration.....

Thank you, Gary. OTOH, there seem to be a fair number of folks who end up with these life altering problems who did not seem to know that there was a pretty good chance they could indeed end up with them. Or for sure even more at least did not hear about them from their surgeon in advance. Should they hear about it from those who did suffer the consequences?

I agree that this forum is not a "normal distribution of people who have been treated", but when it comes to SEs I am not so sure that is the case. Observing as the noobies come here, I don't see all that much of people coming here months or years after treatment and after they realize they are stuck with some long lasting- or even lifetime- unpleasantness. What it seems to me I see way more often is folks coming here right after diagnoses- or even before biopsy- scared and seeking advice on which way they should go, how dire is their prognosis, etc. Or, coming here right after treatment(me), long before they realize what they are stuck with, still full of hope or at least looking for some hope. So I don't get the impression that folks like me are giving them a biased slant because by hearing from us they are just hearing from the small minority that have had problems that lead to grief and then sought out this forum. I think in that regard they are a fairly normal distribution of guys that chose whatever treatment, either shortly before coming here(me) or after coming here, and then later they are relating their results and SEs, good or bad. That is my impression, but I certainly could be wrong.

And the last thing I want to do is be negative to some guy who is scared to death and trying to figure out what to do. But if asked, I either have to be silent or be honest. And what I did not quite fully realize before treatment- before coming here- was that not only did I have at least very close to just as good a chance of a cure or long remission with some treatment other than surgery, but what with me being high risk some would claim I had a better odds with a different treatment. Any of you guys disagree with that? If that is so, then what have I gained by locking in these SEs that mess with my mind at least a little bit of every day? (and so many have these things so much worse than I have so far). I mean if a medical condition screws you up bad, and there is no other choice, so be it, life is tough. But that is not the case. OK, with my hi risk AS(and it's zero SEs) would probably have been crazy, but there were other choices with pretty good results and generally far fewer severe and immediate and permanent SEs. I just wish I had known some one like me to get hold of me an say "Don't do it, don't let them cut your nerves and cut out one of your sphincters unless there is NO OTHER choice, are you crazy!". Sorry guys, hate to be so dang negative, but that is just me and my feelings 3 1/2 years later. I am blessed in many ways, and things could be so much worse(and who knows about the future?), but it does not feel good to lose the things you have a good chance of losing, when you know you really didn't have to lose them. Should I hide that from people trying to figure out what to do? ( and even I do know of some positives with surgery- sleeping all night and pissing like an 18 year old- but man what a price.)
profile picture
RealisticOptimist
Regular Member
Joined : Mar 2017
Posts : 63
Posted 9/5/2017 7:58 PM (GMT -8)
To answer the OP, nope, but I wish I didn't have positive margins, ECE and an upgraded GS based on post op path report.
profile picture
dude1969
Regular Member
Joined : Jul 2011
Posts : 438
Posted 9/6/2017 2:08 PM (GMT -8)
BillyBob, I appreciate all of your thoughtful responses to this old thread. If anyone took the time to read the whole thing I was one of the posters in on it at the beginning, so I appreciate that it has not devolved into an argument about treatment options.

ChrisR might not have the same regrets today as he did when he started this thread. But I think he might agree with me that his treatment might have been different had his PCa occurred a decade later.

I know his confidence in Hopkins is unwavering. I also know that only he can share his unique situation that spurred this thread. I hope he sees that it is active and will chime in. I miss him. He's a terrific guy with a wealth of knowledge. I hope is happy and healthy today... 4 or 5 years after this thread started.
profile picture
RobLee
Veteran Member
Joined : Apr 2017
Posts : 1488
Posted 9/6/2017 4:33 PM (GMT -8)
Geez. Just look at the progression of this thread. Scroll up near the top to see that I chose surgery after considering all options, here:

www.healingwell.com/community/default.aspx?f=35&m=2711891&g=3908116#m3908116

Then just two boxes down MK is saying basically that "more men should acknowledge their regrets"...

MK1965 said...
I know for sure, it is many more people who regretted RP but the do not want to acknowledge it. Mistake is mistake and no one should be ashamed to acknowledge it. I am sure it is not just me, myself and I who feel it and coming fort with regrets.

I stated it clearly that surgery ruined my life, my best years when I could and should enjoy everything what life is offering. I hope somebody else will make confession and let his frustrations to be known to prostate Ca world.
MK

Then right after that Kinney is referring to the "privileged comments which preceded"...

NKinney said...
MK1965, I was merely poking at the "privileged" comments which preceded yours...and thought you would probably agree. Privilege is when you think something is not a problem because it's not a problem to you personally.

Really? I'm "privileged"? Am I not supposed to be offended by that?

Then finally, the voice of reason:

dude1969 said...
I would have liked to have waited another year or 5 before having surgery. I would have STILL had surgery and by the same guy that operated on me.

Now that's more like it! My surgeon SAVED MY LIFE. And given the same situation, I would have had the same surgery by the same surgeon. Yes, I regret that my cancer was not treated several years earlier, and I regret that it wasn't G7 or stage T2.

These gentlemen can gripe that surgery "ruined their lives", but it was actually CANCER that changed your life. A different form of treatment would not necessarily have been without side effects. You made a choice and you are living with the results. You are still alive. Is that not something to be thankful for? When have you ever had the luxury of going back and changing ANYTHING in your lives?
profile picture
Fairwind
Veteran Member
Joined : Jul 2010
Posts : 4107
Posted 9/6/2017 5:00 PM (GMT -8)
The only way you can have regrets is if you are still alive....If you are still alive, your surgery probably has something to do with it...I have a hard time being regretful....Even though my surgery failed I don't regret doing it..On this journey you never look back...
profile picture
mattam
Veteran Member
Joined : Aug 2015
Posts : 3991
Posted 9/6/2017 5:05 PM (GMT -8)
RobLee, I'm not 100% certain, but I don't think the "privileged" comment was directed at you.
✚ New Topic ✚ Reply
12345


More On Prostate Cancer

Positive For Prostate Cancer

Positive For Prostate Cancer

7 Ways To Stay In Control And Reduce Stress While Battling Cancer

7 Ways To Stay In Control And Reduce Stress While Battling Cancer


HealingWell

About Us  |   Advertise  |   Subscribe  |   Privacy & Disclaimer
Connect With Us
Facebook Twitter Instagram Pinterest LinkedIn
© 1997-2023 HealingWell.com LLC All Rights Reserved. Our website is for informational purposes only. HealingWell.com LLC does not provide medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment.