He's only 52 years old, though. If I get PCa at 52 I'm getting treated.
15 years is not a long time for 52-year-old. He is very likely to progress to the point of needing treatment during his lifetime and it will never be more curable than it is now. Plus I would argue the primary endpoint here is not death from prostate cancer, but rather avoiding spread that then requires ADT which sucks much more than the radiation.
The fact that the patient came for a consult to radiation suggest that he expressed a desire for treatment to the surgeon, who then referred him on for RT.
Everyone has the right to have their cancer treated. It is not necessarily what I would have recommended but it is not wrong.
I don't want to end my sex life before I turn 60.
😆
Ok, let's stay serious. The PROTECT trial demonstrated quite nicely that about 50% of men with a low risk disease (and this patient here has like ultra-low risk disease) required treatment down the road.
So, if I can skip active treatment for 5 years or so, before that 1 core GS6, PSA<5 ng/ml, goes up to 3 cores GS6, PSA 8 ng/ml, then that's fine with me. My chances of cure are likely the same whether or not I have this treated at 52 or 56.
And yes, I agree it is not wrong to treat. But I would suggest not treating now and pursuing active surveillance as the more preferable way.
Patient compliance is paramount in this. If he goes down the active surveillance road, he will need a confirmatory biopsy after 1 year, regular MRIs, PSA measurements and futher biopsies. Some patients hate that, others are fine with it.
I have two patients on AS right now. They both didn't want surgery and were sent to me by the urologists, both very-low risk PCA. I have been managing them (they like me more than the urologist) for several years now. Both are super happy, no sign of progression.
Oh cmon. Way worse than the flu.
If I’m your patient, and you actively try to discourage me from RT, but I’m not dissuaded and actively try to get you to treat me, who will win. Will you get discouraged that you couldn’t make me quit my get-treated thoughts.
I know, I was merely being provocative.
If I cannot persuade you, I will offer active treatment. But my first advice will be active surveillance.