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Eight Years after Surgery PSA up DANG

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Prostate Cancer
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maldugs
Veteran Member
Joined : Jun 2007
Posts : 813
Posted 12/29/2014 10:04 PM (GMT -8)
Well I am still here on and off, will be 8 years in July 2015, my PSA was real slow for a long time, now it seems to be galloping along, yours is only slow, so maybe it will stay that way, hope so.

Regards Mal.
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Tall Allen
Elite Member
Joined : Jul 2012
Posts : 10645
Posted 12/29/2014 11:53 PM (GMT -8)
So the important findings were that you did have a positive margin at the right apex, and that your pathology Gleason score was 3+4. Your stage is T2 (I can't tell if it's T2b or T2c without seeing the diagram, but it doesn't really matter).

So the bad news is that salvage radiation will be required if you want a cure, and the time to do it was in 2008 - which is to say that it's long overdue, and you don't want to wait. The good news is that with your positive margin, you can pretty well guess there's a tumor growing in the prostate bed near where the right apex was. The other good news is that hormone therapy probably won't do much for you.

If you have an excellent radiologist who has experience at such things, an mpMRI might be able to show just where the recurrence is, and they can do a boost of radiation to that or those places, as long as there are no critical structures in danger of getting over-zapped there.Otherwise, the standard of care is to zap the entire prostate bed uniformly, and unless the planning CT/MRI shows enlarged nodes, with your low PSA and Gleason score, they can probably be spared.

- Allen
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PSA3DOT7
Veteran Member
Joined : Dec 2013
Posts : 720
Posted 12/30/2014 3:46 AM (GMT -8)
Wow,

You could have your report (Image) as a Holiday Card. Technology for you!

.
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56pontiac
Regular Member
Joined : Sep 2006
Posts : 240
Posted 12/30/2014 3:57 AM (GMT -8)
Tall Allen, Thanks, you seem to really know this stuff. Got more information from you than the doctor. Here is the diagram chart that I got with my records.
VIEW IMAGE
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Tall Allen
Elite Member
Joined : Jul 2012
Posts : 10645
Posted 12/30/2014 9:11 AM (GMT -8)
So there was tumor on both sides, but no extraprostatic extension or seminal vesicle invasion, so that makes you stage pT2c. As I said, the important thing is the known positive margin and your high and rising PSA.

Do you have a good radiation oncologist?

- Allen
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PeterDisAbelard.
Forum Moderator
Joined : Jul 2012
Posts : 6408
Posted 12/30/2014 9:26 AM (GMT -8)
Everything that the Tall One said.

With your three-year doubling time you can be fairly sure that the radiation will do you.

Keep us posted. Good luck.
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56pontiac
Regular Member
Joined : Sep 2006
Posts : 240
Posted 12/30/2014 9:59 AM (GMT -8)
Tall Allen, I don't have or know a good oncologist radiologist. It appears I am going to need one in the future. I know the urology clinic I go refers to some group and my doc said they have been really good, no burning or problems. As to how good or not I don't know. Any tips on sorting them out? Also the doc said to wait until the next PSA in 6 months before getting my shorts all tied up in knots. Well my shorts are tied up in knots today anyway. All kinds of thoughts is the SRT going to make impotent and incontinent? I had no problem with either after the surgery in 06 never leaking and only 10 months with ED. Thought I was really blessed and exceptional because of it. Now it's like getting told all over again, "you got the big C". I'm sure I will calm down after I get myself more educated. Well once again Healing Well to the rescue.
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PeterDisAbelard.
Forum Moderator
Joined : Jul 2012
Posts : 6408
Posted 12/30/2014 10:23 AM (GMT -8)
56,

Remind us where you live (nearest big city) and maybe someone will have a recommendation.

I've done radiation. it wasn't bad. Every weekday for seven weeks I would go to the center, enter the lead-lined room where a pretty young lady would hand me a small towel to preserve my modesty while I dropped my trousers and hopped up on the table. Then she would lube my pubes with cool gel... and then she would...

ultrasound my bladder to make sure it was full, zap me with xrays and charge my insurance company another twelve hundred bucks.

Ok, so the story doesn't end as well as it starts. But it wasn't bad.

Radiation doesn't usually cause incontinence but it can make it worse if you've already got it. As for ED... well, it doesn't help matters much, but the effect is gradual during several years after treatment and it is hard to sort it out from just getting a bit older.
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Tall Allen
Elite Member
Joined : Jul 2012
Posts : 10645
Posted 12/30/2014 10:25 AM (GMT -8)
Impotence and incontinence as side effects of salvage radiation are less likely this long after your surgery. The problem comes when radiation is applied to the newly cut and handled tissues, especially at the place where the urethra was sliced and where tissue was scraped away at the bladder neck, apex, neurovascular bundles, etc. After 8 years, all those tissues are well healed. There may be other kinds of urinary issues due to the irritation, but those are usually easily remedied and not long lasting. I think a low dose ED med like 5 mg Cialis or 20 mg Viagra may help protect the neurovascular bundles from radiation damage, but that is controversial.

If you care to say the city or part of the country you are in, there may be some on this site who can recommend an RO to you. I know that with 7 weeks of radiation, you will need someone close.

- Allen
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A Yooper
Veteran Member
Joined : Jul 2012
Posts : 2149
Posted 12/30/2014 11:16 AM (GMT -8)
THIS..... is where the Tall One shines!!!! Great insight TA, incredibly helpful and we all (again) are learning more!

Sounds like you've got plenty of positives '56 - my best to you as you continue down this path.
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56pontiac
Regular Member
Joined : Sep 2006
Posts : 240
Posted 12/30/2014 1:04 PM (GMT -8)
Eugene, Springfield, Oregon GO DUCKS!!!! Thank you for the posts and sharing what it was like. This guy lives 60 miles from me on the coast. He has the same doctor that I do and his numbers and story seems to be similar. He had his SRT he called it Image Guided Radiation Therapy (IGRT) in Springfield sounds like with good results.
www.ustooflorence.org/journeys.php?d=Surgery%20-%20open&u=Bob%20Horney.txt

Post Edited (56pontiac) : 12/30/2014 2:09:05 PM (GMT-7)

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Tall Allen
Elite Member
Joined : Jul 2012
Posts : 10645
Posted 12/30/2014 2:30 PM (GMT -8)
The only place I know of in Oregon is OHSU Knight Cancer Institute in Portland. They would probably be able to give you that mpMRI I mentioned. They might have locations around the state as well. Perhaps call them to arrange a consultation.

Image guided radiation therapy (IGRT) is needed when there is a squirrely prostate in place, but less necessary when the prostate is gone - they just use the pelvic bones as their visual reference. But if they want to use the mpMRI to zoom in on a specific place, they might want to add image guidance for extra precision. It usually involves implanting gold fiducial markers (the size of rice grains). They normally do it into the prostate, but sometimes for salvage they do it into the prostate bed instead. All of these are details your RO can better explain.

- Allen
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56pontiac
Regular Member
Joined : Sep 2006
Posts : 240
Posted 12/31/2014 11:19 AM (GMT -8)
Tall Allen what an asset you are to this forum. Thanks to everyone that posted I have a lot more information and knowledge now than I had. I will report back as to what happens. I am going to wait until I get another PSA in June and make some decisions then. It has been a pretty good eight years for me. Getting this news and PSA increase to the magic number of 0.20 was like getting the bad news back in 2006. My dobber was definitely down for the last week or so. I am fine now and my attitude is correct as to who do I really trust and rely on concerning my life? It is the one who has ALWAYS been there and never let me down. I am good to go no matter what goes down with this disease. Psalms 139:16 "Your eyes saw my unformed body; all the days ordained for me were written in your book before one of them came to be." Also my wife pointed out I am most likely not going to die a painful excruciating death this week and we do have the Rose Bowl to play tomorrow. smilewinkgrin I'll be around the forum. Thanks Again
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Tall Allen
Elite Member
Joined : Jul 2012
Posts : 10645
Posted 12/31/2014 2:11 PM (GMT -8)
A new analysis demonstrates that a PSA≥0.03 is a better indicator of recurrence than the traditional value of ≥0.2 when men have positive margins. (I just wrote a review of this which will be published next week.) I suggest that you go ahead and make an appointment at OHSU ASAP rather than wait until June. It may take a while to get seen. These things can metastasize, and you are not taking any hormone therapy that might slow it down. You want to treat while it is still curable.

- Allen
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kenny123
Regular Member
Joined : Jun 2014
Posts : 68
Posted 12/31/2014 2:55 PM (GMT -8)
to 56 pont, your time in between small psa rises is good, but as in my case when it reached .3 my doctor started rad treatment,you have a 50/50 change of it getting the cancer, its a easy treatment, and mind just lasted a year before psa started to rise,, the rad oncology dr is just one person on your team, if I had to do over would have talked to the other drs on team on planning what seems to work , total grays given,etc,etc, I had 68 grays now my dr said that people who have had their prostate removed have to get less so their s no damage, also found out dr s[ DO NOT LIKE BEING TOLD WHAT THEY SHOULD DO ] so pick a good hospt first the better hosp the better rad team you will have. kal
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Sagittarian
Veteran Member
Joined : May 2011
Posts : 556
Posted 1/4/2015 3:30 AM (GMT -8)
56pontiac,
I agree that this forum is a wonderful place, a sea of collective knowledge. Like you, I pop in from time to time, report in, and move on. Good luck on your renewed battle, and thirst for knowledge.

Tall Allen,
((PSA≥0.03 is a better indicator of recurrence than the traditional value of ≥0.2 when men have positive margins.)) This caught my eye. Since May 2011 (negative margins) I have had two PSAs at 0.03. My last PSA was 0.03 in DEC 2014, the other 0.03 reading was 2 years prior to that. All other PSA tests, 6 months apart, were undetectable < 0.1. The two PSA 0.03 results were from the same lab, all other tests from two other labs. Labs were never chosen, insurance company tells me who to use, and my health insurance changes often. I am interested on your take/opinion, since I am right at the 0.03 mark, thanks.
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Shaba.Doug
Veteran Member
Joined : Mar 2014
Posts : 959
Posted 1/4/2015 5:47 AM (GMT -8)
I was told prior to my surgery that 0.03 would be the next trigger point. That was before pathology, obviously. Probably more to do with G9 than margins, in my case.

Cheers, Doug
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Tall Allen
Elite Member
Joined : Jul 2012
Posts : 10645
Posted 1/4/2015 8:27 AM (GMT -8)
Sagittarian,

The study I referred to only applies in cases where there is "aggressive pathology"- Stage 3 or 4 or positive margins. It does not seem to apply to you. The point is that about half of men even with aggressive pathology wind up getting unnecessary adjuvant radiation. You can read my review of it here:

When should the patient and doctor consider salvage radiation therapy?

- Allen
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kenny123
Regular Member
Joined : Jun 2014
Posts : 68
Posted 1/4/2015 2:58 PM (GMT -8)
Sagittarian, a patient should start S R T when his psa has risen to 0.3 after your rad pr, for the reason that most people that have had a r.p. the 1st 6 mos have a low psa before it starts to double, [when I seen the head of surgery at pitt univ hosp, about my odds he said that it depends IF you have a very low kind of pc,[ my psa before surgery was 12.psa] so he say too many people make the mistake of going for a nerve spareing operation, and that the first place it comes back is in the seminal vesicles/ then what? so he rems a rad pro with all out as the best odds of living longer, so I went with that, its been 5 yrs, so far, I belive that everone should have sav rad if your psa keeps rising, and when they say it failed , since they rad your pelvis ariea, that it does kill a lot of p c cells, just not all, look up the gold standerd of treatment for p.c. good luck,
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Sagittarian
Veteran Member
Joined : May 2011
Posts : 556
Posted 1/5/2015 5:38 AM (GMT -8)
56pontiac,
I apologize, if your thread seemed to be commandeered, good luck to you. You have 10 years on me (I'm 57), lets see if life allows me to go that far :>

Tall Allen,
Read article, curious what results of pending studies will be. Being T2 and 0.03 sure is cutting it close, and yes with negative margins. A PSA of 0.04 will put me back on duty with frequent visits to this site, and taking sips from the fountains of knowledge.

Cheers All !
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56pontiac
Regular Member
Joined : Sep 2006
Posts : 240
Posted 6/14/2015 10:51 AM (GMT -8)
Just checking in PSA down a smige from 0.20 December 2014 to 0.17 June 2015 I'll take it.

10/2006 DaVinci Surgery PSA 0.01
10/2007 PSA 0.02
10/2008 PSA 0.04
10/2009 PSA 0.06
10/2010 PSA 0.06
10/2011 PSA 0.085
10/2012 PSA 0.15
05/2013 PSA 0.13
10/2013 PSA 0.13
06/2014 PSA 0.14
12/2014 PSA 0.20
06/2015 PSA 0.17
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Almost a 10
Veteran Member
Joined : Mar 2014
Posts : 1070
Posted 6/14/2015 11:56 AM (GMT -8)
Hi Pontiac,

I took a look at your post surgery pathology report. All I can say is I wish mine were as complete at that. The diagrams are very helpful. Looks like your tumor extended to your right apical margin. That is the part where the prostate attaches to the uretha that then passes through the penis. The pathology indicates that the tumor extends to the right apical margin.It is possible that microscopic cancer escape the prostate and that is what is causing your PSA to rise. You may be looking at SRT in the future or a combination of ADT at SRT.
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Tim G
Veteran Member
Joined : Jul 2006
Posts : 3052
Posted 6/14/2015 7:58 PM (GMT -8)
Good news, Pontiac. I hope the downward trend keeps up. Take care and keep us updated....Tim
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