Staging looks at how much cancer is in your body and where it is. Tests like biopsy, digital rectal exam, bone scan, transrectal ultrasound (TRUS), prostate-specific antigen (PSA) level in your blood, CT, MRI, and PET scan may be done to help stage your cancer. Your providers need to know about your cancer and your health so that they can plan the best treatment for you.
Staging looks at the size of the tumor, where it is, and if it has spread to other organs. The staging system for prostate cancer is called the “TNM system,” along with the Gleason score. The staging has three parts, plus the Gleason score:
Staging for prostate cancer is based on:
Staging is important because it helps guide your treatment options. The staging system is complex. Below is a summary of the staging system. Talk to your provider about the stage of your cancer.
Stage I
Stage IIA
Stage IIB
Stage IIC
Stage IIIA
Stage IIIB
Stage IIIC
Stage IVA
Stage IVB
Treatment for prostate cancer depends on many things, like your cancer stage, age, overall health, and testing results. Your treatment may include:
Watchful waiting (also called observation) is sometimes used if you are older or have other health problems and treatment may not be good for you. Watchful waiting uses fewer tests and your symptoms guide treatment. This treatment is most often used to control symptoms from the cancer, but not to cure it.
Active surveillance watches the cancer closely. You will often need to see your provider for a prostate-specific antigen (PSA) blood test about every 6 months and a digital rectal exam (DRE) at least once a year. Prostate biopsies and imaging tests may be done every 1 to 3 years as well. If your test results change, your provider will go over treatment options.
Surgery is the most common treatment for prostate cancer if it has not spread outside of the prostate gland. The main surgery used to treat prostate cancer is called a radical prostatectomy. There are a few ways this surgery can be done. Read about the different kinds of prostatectomy at OncoLink.org.
Prostate cancer is often treated with radiation therapy. External or internal radiation therapy may be used.
External radiation therapy uses high energy rays (similar to x-rays) to kill cancer cells. The rays enter the body, are directed at the cancer, and come out the other side of your body. The types of external radiation that can be used are three-dimensional conformal radiation therapy (3D-CRT), intensity modulated radiation therapy (IMRT), and stereotactic body radiation therapy (SBRT).
Another type of external beam radiation is proton therapy. Proton therapy deposits most of its cell-killing energy within the tumor site (the prostate gland). This helps to protect nearby tissues from the effects of radiation.
Brachytherapy is the use of internal radiation. Small radioactive seeds are implanted into the patient's prostate in the operating room. The seeds slowly put out radiation to kill cancer cells. There is the possibility that the seeds will move out of your prostate. You may need to stay in the hospital for a few days after the treatment is done.
Radiation therapy, like most treatments, can cause side effects. These can be short-term or late effects. Short-term side effects can happen during or shortly after radiation treatment. Late effects can happen months to years after radiation treatment.
Radiopharmaceutical therapy for prostate cancer is a treatment that uses a small amount of radioactive medicine given by vein (IV). The medicine goes through the body, attaches to the cancer cells, and destroys them. By attaching to only cancer cells, it limits the damage done to your healthy cells. This treatment is used when the cancer has spread, especially to the bones. Examples of radiopharmaeceutical medications for prostate cancer include lutetium-177 PSMA-617 (Pluvicto) and radium-223 dichloride (Xofigo).
Prostate tissue and prostate cancers depend on male sex hormones, called androgens, to grow and replicate. Testosterone is an androgen that is very important to the prostate gland. Men make androgens in their testicles. One of the ways to treat prostate cancer is to remove androgens from the body, making the cancer shrink and grow more slowly. This is called androgen deprivation therapy (ADT). There are a few different ways to remove androgens:
The choice of which ADT to use is based on the extent of the disease and if it is given with radiation (concurrent) or before radiation (neo-adjuvant). Sometimes, a combination of methods is used.
Over time, all prostate cancers become resistant to hormonal therapy. However, this often takes many years.
There are a number of side effects associated with hormonal therapy. Hormonal therapy usually causes impotence and loss of your sex drive. It can also cause breast enlargement, hot flashes, and muscle and bone loss (osteoporosis). Your providers can prescribe medications to help with bone loss and hot flashes.
Cryotherapy uses very cold temperatures to “freeze” prostate tissue and kill cancer cells. It is also called cryosurgery. Cryotherapy can be done to the entire prostate gland or to certain areas (called focal cryotherapy).
Chemotherapy is the use of anti-cancer medications to kill cancer cells. There are a number of chemotherapy drugs that can be used for prostate cancer, and they are often used in combinations. Common medications used in the treatment of prostate cancer are docetaxel and cabazitaxel in combination with corticosteroids (prednisone). Metastatic prostate cancer may be treated with additional therapies including abiraterone, enzalutamide and mitoxantrone.
Immunotherapy is the use of a person's own immune system to kill cancer cells. Examples of immunotherapy medications that may be used to treat prostate cancer are sipuleucel-T and pembrolizumab
Some cases of prostate cancer may be treated with targeted therapies that focus on certain gene changes or proteins in the tumor. Targeted therapies work by targeting something specific to a cancer cell, which lets the medication kill cancer cells. This has less of an effect on healthy cells. Examples of targeted therapies for prostate cancer are talazoparib, niraparib, rucaparib and olaparib. These medications work when there is a mutation in either your BRCA1 or BRCA2 gene. Your provider will test you for this mutation before treatment with these medications.
You may be offered a clinical trial as part of your treatment plan. To find out more about current clinical trials, visit the OncoLink Clinical Trials Matching Service.
Your care team will make sure you are included in choosing your treatment plan. This can be overwhelming as you may be given a few options to choose from. It is okay to take your time to think about your options and meet with different providers to decide what is best for you.
To learn more about prostate cancer, read more at OncoLink.org.
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