Prostate Cancer Management

Overview

Receiving a diagnosis of prostate cancer is a very stressful event but do not panic. Prostate cancer is always treatable, even when it is incurable. Men with clinically localized prostate cancer (the majority of men who have biopsy as a result of screening) are in no jeopardy with no risk of death for years and the large majority do not die from prostate cancer. Men who have advanced prostate cancer (presenting with disease that is incurable) have treatable disease but can expect may years of good quality of life.

The management of prostate cancer continues to evolve. Management is very specific to the patient and the characteristics of their cancer. Therefore, treatment is individualized. There will be multiple options for treatment.

The goal of this section is to provide our patients with a framework that they can use to think about prostate cancer. Making good decisions is more important than making quick decisions so it is critical that patient’s spend the time to review the information they are given and the reflect and think about their options. Going with one’s gut in these circumstances is more likely to lead to a poor decision.

When applicable, we will enlist the help of other specialists who treat prostate cancer - radiation oncologists and medical oncologists. They will provide you information relevant to your case so we encourage you to listen to them. We encourage you to utilize the information on our own website and those links which we feel are reliable but advise patients to interpret the information they read on the internet and be thoughtful about the value of information they receive from non-physicians or those who may not know all the details of your case.

The Goal of Prostate Cancer Management

The ultimate goal of prostate cancer treatment is to provide each man with the best quality and length of life possible as if the prostate cancer had never developed in the first place.

In an ideal world, we would be able to cure 100% of prostate cancers with 100% success and without even the slightest inconvenience or adverse effect for the patient. While this is what we strive for, it is not possible. Instead, we are presented with risks associated with a disease which is always going to be unpredictable to some extent and treatments that will have the potential to help as well as to harm. Risk is ever present with any course of action and we will strive to help you navigate those risks and make the best possible decisions.

Curable vs. Incurable Prostate Cancer

Fortunately, the vast majority of men with new diagnoses of prostate cancer are in the clinically localized disease state which is potentially curable. The assessment of individualized risk in clinically localized cancer becomes more important. Unfortunately, metastatic disease remains incurable though it is treatable.

An important concept is that of ‘cure’. The potential for cure is only possible if the cancer (1) has not spread from the prostate (i.e. is clinically localized) and (2) is amenable to surgery or radiation. There are situations when cure of clinically localized prostate cancer is unnecessary and active surveillance or watchful waiting strategies are initiated. If the cancer has spread, however, the cancer is incurable. Definite incurability is usually found with an imaging test (bone scan, CT scan or PET scan) that clearly shows that the prostate cancer has ‘left the barn’. The focus of treatment for incurable disease is systemic involving medication (usually managed by a medical oncologist).

When patients with clinically localized disease are likely to benefit from treatment (by having the appropriate mix of cancer characteristics, longevity and risk tolerance) they generally choose either surgery or one of the forms of radiation. This general separation between clinically localized/curable and metastatic/incurable disease is helpful in a practical sense but there are issues. The primary one is that many patients who we think are curable ultimately (in hindsight) are found to have been incurable. The reason is that currently available are unable to detect the microscopic spread of cancer and these microscopic areas of cancer eventually grow and become apparent. This may take years. Therefore, there is often a blending of treatment paradigms where in cases where metastases are likely but not clinically detectable surgery or radiation is combined with a drug treatment.

Cure Palliation

Cure is the eradication of cancer and infers that it will never come back. Cure is the goal but never 100% certain. There is always a risk of disease persistence and this is why we monitor men after treatment.

While cure is possible in many men with localized proste cancer, cure is neither always necessary nor is it always possible.

As of 2011, cure can only be achieved for localized prostate cancers. Advanced prostate cancers can, however, be put into remission for long periods of time.

Prostate cancer that has spread beyond the prostate gland, typically to the bone or lymph nodes, are not curable. Treatment is available. Palliation is providing the best quality of life for men who cannot be cured. This generally involved 'systemic therapy' which is the administration of medication. The mainstay is androgen deprivation using hormonal treatments. This is an area of intense research.

This is the primary goal in men with advanced prostate cancer. Medical oncologists are the primary physicians, with support from radiation oncologists and surgeons.

When to Treat Clinically Localized Prostate Cancer

It might come as a surprise but not all prostate cancers need treatment. Answering if treatment is necessary is the first question to be answered.

While not all men starting with clinically localized prostate cancer progress to the point where treatment is necessary, in those that do progress the consequences may be devastating.

This section provides a framework to answer the question ‘how bad/aggressive is it’ in the context of the larger issue of life expectancy. This comes down to assessing risk. Most men will have some notion about prostate cancer before they come to a diagnosis. Treatment is highly individualized. Be cautious about making assumptions and while a patient may have a gut feeling to pursue once type of treatment over another, approach the discussion with an open mind.

Most men that are diagnosed with prostate cancer via the screening route have ‘clinically localized’ disease (no evidence that it has spread beyond the prostate). This framework applies to them. Management of prostate cancer takes into account 3 primary considerations:

Thinking About Your Options

Having a solid frame of reference is helpful in deciding which course of action might be most helpful and sorting through the options.

Consider Treatment Related Side-Effects

Treatment for localized prostate cancer (which is not typically associated with any symptoms) usually does not improve on what a patient already has in terms of function, whether it be sexual, urinary or bowel function. Therefore, the goal is typically preservation of pre-existing function and avoidance introducing side-effects or adverse events. There are exceptions to this - for example, men who have outflow obstruction from prostate cancer can have a much stronger stream with less urinary urgency and frequency after removal of the prostate.

All of these goals are important, but each man will place a different emphasis on one goal over another. It is, unfortunately, impossible to guarantee with absolute certainty that each goal will be met with success for any given approach but some approaches are more likely to deliver than others. This is despite our best intentions and executing a plan as best as possible. In hindsight, some decisions will appear good and some bad.

 
Short Term/Acute Toxicity Long Term Toxicity
Short term toxicity includes those things which tend to be short lived for weeks to a few months Most short term toxicity is a direct result of treatment rather than from the disesae itself Long term toxcity includes those things which tend to be either long lived or may appear long after treatment is completed Long term toxicity can result from progress of the cancer OR from the treatment itself
Treatment-Related Cancer-Related Treatment-Related Cancer-Related

These will depend on the procedure. For surgery, these include things such as operative time, duration of hospital stay, bleeding, pain, recovery time, risk of anesthetic, duration of catheterization, bladder and erectile dysfunction, etc. For brachytherapy, these include things such as procedure time, anesthetic risks, bleeding, pain, duration of catheterization, bowel, bladder and erectile dysfunction, etc For external beam radiation, these include things such as fatigue, skin changes, bowel, bladder and erectile dysfunction, etc. For hormonal treatments: hot flushes, loss of erectile function and sex drive, weight gain, loss of strength, etc.

Often the multiple treatments are combined. For example, hormone therapy can introduce additional toxicity to radiation treatments.

This is usually only an issue with advanced prostate cancers. This includes pain in the bones, blood in the urine, urinary retention, etc.

Urinary (surgery and radiation): incontinence (leakage), retention, pain, bleeding

Sexual (surgery and radiation): loss of ejaculation, loss of erections

Bowel (radiation only): diarrhea, loose stool, loss of stool (fecal incontinence), bleeding, fistulae

Other: hormonal treatments used on a long term basis can have a number of health effects, including osteoporosis

Blockage of the bladder by urethral obstruction

Bleeding in the urine

Blockage of the tubes draining the kidneys into the bladder (ureters)

Pelvic pain

Bony pain

Fatigue

Death

Investigational Treatments

It is inevitable and completely understandable that many patients will seek information for available treatments on the internet. Be cautious. Established treatments generally have well defined risks and benefits. Investigational or new treatments do not. It takes 10-20 years of clinical data to obtain reliable cancer control data in the treatment of localized prostate cancer. Therefore, any comment on treatment effectiveness for localized disease with a shorter duration of follow-up should be considered unproven. Such treatments are ideally conducted in the setting of a clinical trial with institutional review boards involving experts in the field.

If there is a trial applicable to your case we will offer it. We will answer questions regarding other trials to the best of our ability within the reasonable time constrains.

High-intensity Focussed Ultrasound (HIFU)

Recommended Web Resources

Reliable Prostate Cancer Websites (Best resources listed first)

European Association of Urology Patient Information

European Association of Urology Physician Guidelines

National Comprehensive Cancer Network Patient Information

National Cancer Institute Patient Information

American Urologic Association Patient Information

General Information on Cancer

UNDERSTANDING CANCER - Metrovan Urology info on the principles of diagnosis, staging, prognosis and more.

American Cancer Society

BC Cancer Agency: Good general website from the British Columbia Cancer Agency. Has contact information on locations.

National Cancer Institute: Excellent source of understandable and mainly unbiased information. Several very good brochures on every stage of prostate cancer.

National Comprehensive Cancer Network: peer-reviewed expert content/prostate cancer guidance on evidence-based cancer diagnosis and management. Best for Prostate and Kidney Cancer. The most in-depth information is located in the physician section and requires registration.