Prostate Cancer Survivors

 

YANA - YOU ARE NOT ALONE NOW

PROSTATE CANCER SUPPORT SITE

 

 

This forum is for the discussion of anything to do with Prostate Cancer.
There are only four rules:

  • No fundraisers, no commercials (although it is OK to recommend choices of treatment or medical people based on your personal research; invitations to participate in third-party surveys are also acceptable, provided there is no compensation to YANA);
  • No harvesting e-mail addresses for Spam;
  • No insults or flaming - be polite and respectful at all times and understand that there may be a variety of points of view, all of which may have some validity;
  • Opinions are OK, but please provide as much factual evidence as possible for any assertions that you are making

Failure to abide by these simple rules will result in the immediate and permanent suspension of your posting privileges.

Since this is an International Forum, please specify your location in your post.

General Forum
Start a New Topic 
Author
Comment
View Entire Thread
Re: low PSA, small cell prostate cancer? - increasing symptoms

You could have your pathology slides reviewed by Bostwick or Oppenheimer as they do test for variants and ploidy analysis of the PCa cells DNA (3-types of DNA) and atleast 24 variants of PCa have been found. There are a couple of them that are more aggressive and don't respond well to many drug protocols (some of the leading onco-docs use this information and have treated such patients...i.e. Myers, Strum, Scholz, Lam, Leibowitz, Sartor, and others). Sometimes in small cell the psa numbers are almost non-detectable levels or slight, but with symptoms and other things that oncologists might monitor. Dr. Strum recommends a number of additional testings in his book page 35..a couple of them are PAP and Prylinks-D tests and many other markers.

I have a continuing journey with some comparisons to yours (used flomax, had total urinary blockage PCa Dx-2002 Gleasons 7,8,9's and 2 sets like that, bpsa 46.6 all 12- cores 75-95% vol. with PCa). Did ADT3 with unique radiation protocol and later switched drugs to control this with lesser side effects and even better results were obtained...how long is my journey is yet to be determined. All cases are individualized to a large degree. You have alot more choices to try than just chemo or radiations...depends upon the docs you enlist...it varies plenty more than many would believe. Perhaps Terry will have some things to share on this, we all have alot of perspectives as patients dealing with this. Best going forward on this.

RETURN TO HOME PAGE LINKS