Hello, Everyone. I’ve benefited greatly from reading the posts on this site and since I’ve now reached a (temporary?) resolution--“undetectable PSA” after various treatments--I thought I’d summarize my story. All of my treatments were at the Smilow Cancer Hospital, which is part of the Yale-New Haven Hospital system in Connecticut. I’m 71.
7/1/17 PSA 9.1
9/11/17 Biopsy found Adenocarcinoma (total 22 needles used)
3 needles Gleason 4+4=8/10 (Grade Group 4) one with perineural invasion
1 needle Gleason 4+3=7/10 (Grade Group 3) with perineural invasion
1 needle Gleason 3+4=7/10 (Grade Group 2)
5 needles Gleason 3+3=6/10 (Grade Group 1)
9/21/17 NM Bone Scan Whole Body: No metastases
10/23/17 PSA 15.8
10/23/17 CT Chest Abdomen Pelvis W IV Contrast: No metastases
11/20/17 Radical, robotic, nerve-sparing prostatectomy by Dr. Preston Sprenkle. Removed many lymph nodes, did not find any extracapsular extension; margins negative but tumor close in one area.
Pathology report: percent malignant cells (after manual microdissection): 80%
Somatic variant detected in the tumor: Variant Allelic Fraction BRCA2 D1386fs 42%
12/29/17 PSA 0.077 (it was disappointing that PSA was not undetectable after surgery)
2/29/18 PSA 0.073 (a slight drop made me hope it would drop further; it did not)
3/27/18 PSA 0.097, testosterone 423 ng/dL
4/4/18 PET/CT Scan skull to thigh prostate: “Small mildly avid focus in the left inferior sacrum.”
4/13/18 PSA 0.113, testosterone total 327 ng/dL. First three-month Lupron injection
4/19/18 MRI Sacrum W Wo IV Contrast: “Nonspecific, small foci of vague enhancement and T2 bright signal in the left S4 region and left pubic body.”
5/11/18 PSA 0.056 (drop after month on Lupron)
6/4/18 MRI pelvis without and with contrast (MRI prostate): “No prostate cancer recurrence in the pelvis status post prostatectomy. A 1.2 x 0.9 cm T2 hyperintense and minimally enhancing region in the left S4 vertebral body is again noted, but its borders appear more vague as compared to prior (previously 1.1 x 0.9 cm). There is no associated bone expansion. The T2 hyperintense lesion seen in the left pubic body is likely excluded from the field of view on this study.”
6/8/18 PSA 0.035
7/12/18 PSA 0.026
7/13/18 Second three-month Lupron Injection
8/24/18 PSA 0.013
9/11/18 Begin 39-session radiation with RO Dr. James Yu, ~ 70 Gy (I forget the exact number but Dr. Yu and I agreed on an “aggressive” dose) to prostate bed, pelvic area and bone metastases.
10/9/18 First six-month Lupron injection
11/5/18 End 39-session radiation.
11/06/18 PSA 0.011
1/3/19 PSA 0.008, testosterone <12 ng/dL
2/28/19 PSA “undetectable”
So, here I am. I’m approaching the one-year anniversary of being on Lupron and Dr. Yu, my radiation oncologist, and I agreed about continuing with it for another two years (again, a more aggressive choice). My next PSA test will be in six months. The reason my radiation was originally delayed somewhat was because of incontinence, which was a real problem for months after surgery (the surgeon who performed the prostatectomy said that the location of the tumors made it trickier than usual to reconnect the urethra). My hope was that my control would improve (incidentally, working with a physical therapist in the Yale-New Haven Urology Department who specializes in pelvic floor issues helped me considerably). The side effects of the radiation were mild in my case; incontinence got somewhat worse and fatigue increased a bit, but these passed fairly quickly after radiation was completed. It’s now over a year after surgery and my incontinence has improved but only to about 80 to 90%. I looked into various procedures that exist for this but don’t believe my situation is bad enough to warrant any of them (artificial sphincter, etc.). I use pads all the time (I like the Tena brand) and experience increased leakage when I exercise and if I drink alcohol. This is a nuisance but manageable with forethought. I have noticed some fatigue and muscle aches after starting the Lupron but it helps to exercise vigorously. I also gained about twenty pounds and am now working on losing it (down five pounds so far; healthful diet). I go to the gym almost every day, alternating between intermittent high intensity aerobics on a stationary bicycle or elliptical trainer, weight machines (I’ve been trying the slow-weight method), and walking (averaging 4-5 miles a day). I still get occasional hot flashes but they are manageable. The libido is completely gone. My wife of over thirty-five years and I have a wonderfully supportive relationship and I think of her as my “Rock of Gibraltar.” I have two grown children who have also been great. I retired last spring after decades of teaching in a university and now write full time. “Undetectable” is a wonderful word and I hope my PSA stays that way for a long time, although I am well aware of what the genetic mutation that I have implies about the future.