Went for another treatment of SBRT today for mets in my hip. Met with Oncologist afterward and were discussing treatment and stated that my Psa has dropped the last 2 tests but my met on hip had enlarged. He stated that Psa may not be a good indicator of my situation and the the zytiga I have been on for the last 3 months is probably not working. I ask him how many more options I have left and the discussion turned to men with rising Psa have on average about 18 years give or take. I asked him again and he made same statement. On the way home I just started to think he must have misspoke and meant 18 months. I was hoping he was right with 18 years but my gut tells me he had misspoke. He stated that they may try chemo after I get results from bone and cat scan on Jan 7th. I asked if that chemo is the big gun and he said no Xtandi is which did not work for me. Any input. Thanks
Remark by Oncologist did not make sense - Advanced Prostate...
Remark by Oncologist did not make sense
I hope the chemo works for you, perhaps combined with carboplatin. Good idea to biopsy that hip met.
Your MO has NO idea how long you have to live. They told me 7 years ago I had 2 years to live. Surprise, I'm still here with a PSA <0.1.
I also think chemo is a good option. A biopsy of a metastasis is recommended in any case.
No doctor can make a statement regarding life expectancy. My oncologist doesn't commit herself either. She says that I still have treatment options and you don't know beforehand how they will work. It could work very well or, of course, it could work badly. But that only becomes clear after the start of treatment.
Best wishes Theo
If the PSA value has dropped now according to the last two tests, I would continue with Zytiga and see how the PSA value develops. If the PSA value drops it seems to be working. Chemo is usually done after Zytiga failed.
Your doctor did not mean 18 months but I think you cannot expect to live for 18 years from now.
I think the bone met should be controlled now after the SBRT radiadion, even if it grew before that – which I doubt is correct. It is just a remark by the MO that the PSA value is not a good indicator now, no proof provided. Therefore I would just wait how the PSA value develops now using Zytiga.
Thanks does the zytiga take a while to work in some people?
They did do a biopsy of the mets and there were mutations
Sorry I meant no mutations
Take the 18 years and be determined to make it so. It is not impossible. Are you going to have the femur met treated with SBRT?
18 long years..... Long enough to latch onto that young blonde in the office with those long georgous legs.... lucky you.........
Good Luck, Good Health and Good Humor.
j-o-h-n Wednesday 12/30/2020 6:59 PM EST