10 important questions to ask if you’re diagnosed with prostate cancer

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“Prostate cancer often presents unique challenges to patients and physicians alike. It can be indolent and nonaggressive — or life-threatening and everything in between. Unlike most cancers that have a dedicated road map for treatment, prostate cancer revolves around opinions and biases.

To help patients navigate the land mine of the disease, here are 10 basic questions to ask your doctor when diagnosed with it.

1. What is my Gleason score?

The Gleason grade looks to define how close the cancer cells and tissue resemble normal prostate growth. The more normal it looks, the lower the grade and risk; the more different it looks, the higher the grade and risk. The cancer is assigned a grade of 1 to 5, 1 is the lowest risk and 5 the highest. Since the cancer can have multiple tumorous areas that can be different from each other, the two most common patterns found are used to come up with a Gleason score, which is the sum of the two. The aggressiveness of the cancer is defined by this Gleason score:AD

Gleason 6 (3+3) = low risk.

Gleason 7 (3+4 or 4+3) = intermediate risk, some cancers can act indolent or slow-growing, others aggressive.

Gleason 8-10 = High-risk cancer, aggressive, higher risk of spreading.

2. Is there a nodule expressing my cancer?

A palpable, cancerous nodule is more aggressive than cancer found with no nodule.

3. What is my PSA density?

PSA density is the ratio of the PSA (or prostate-specific antigen, a protein in a man’s blood that is often elevated in men with prostate cancer) to the total volume of the prostate. A PSA density of 0.15 or less is considered reassuring for being able to just observe the cancer.

4. What percentage of the total biopsy samples have cancer?

Most urologists take 12 cores, or biopsy samples. So knowing how many of the 12 are positive for cancer is an important measure for estimating the amount of cancer a patient may have. If fewer than a third of samples turn up positive, that is reassuring.AD

5. Among the positive biopsy samples, what percent of the tissue was cancerous?

Measuring the total volume of cancer in each positive sample serves as a surrogate for tumor volume. If 50 percent or more of a sample is positive, that would indicate significant cancer.

6. Is there perineural invasion?

When the cancer cells within the prostate begin to grow around the nerves that are in the prostate, this is called “perineural invasion.” Cancers with perineural invasion have a worse prognosis. Any cancer which has confirmed perineural invasion will require treatment as opposed to merely being kept under observation.

7. Should any imaging tests be performed?

Anyone with prostate cancer with high-risk features should have a CT scan of the abdomen and pelvis (to look for spread into the lymph nodes and liver) and a bone scan (to evaluate possible advancement into the bones).AD

An MRI of the prostate often is used for the initial diagnosis of cancer, since it can show whether the cancer has broken through the outer lining of the prostate, or capsule, and has begun to spread (called extraprostatic spread). Some expert urologists are able to ascertain from the ultrasound performed at the time of biopsy whether the cancer has spread beyond the prostate.

8. What are my options if my cancer is extraprostatic?

Cancers growing beyond the confines of the capsule of the prostate are aggressive and should not be just followed with regular observation. One should prepare for a multipronged approach to treatment. Surgical removal is typically preferred for the younger, healthier patient, followed by possible postoperative radiation (with possible hormonal suppression, as well).”

Read More Here: https://www.washingtonpost.com/national/health-science/10-important-questions-to-ask-if-youre-diagnosed-with-prostate-cancer/2019/01/04/e3f9ced8-0f6c-11e9-8938-5898adc28fa2_story.html