Good so far!: I was diagnosed Dec. 200... - Prostate Cancer N...

Prostate Cancer Network

5,255 members3,321 posts

Good so far!

8 Replies

I was diagnosed Dec. 2005, had prostatectomy Feb 2006. Was undetectable for several years but psa started to rise. When it got to 5.0, had radiation for 7 weeks. Was good for couple of years, then after gallium 68 test, found mastastis lymph nodes. More radiation coupled with Zytiga and pregnizone. Have been on it for 1.5 years with psa at zero. Oh, also taking hormone injections.

Concerned about what happens when treatment stops?

Read more about...
8 Replies
AlanMeyer profile image
AlanMeyerModerator

Hello Jif1,

I think there's a chance that your prostate cancer is cured and it makes sense to stop the treatment and see. If it's not cured, you'll be able to get back on treatment in plenty of time to keep it from progressing far. It's possible that it's not cured but it's been suppressed to the point that it won't be visible on a PSA test for several years - that's what happened to you in the past. That's not what you want, but it's still positive and will give you a break from treatment.

I'm no expert and my speculations aren't worth much, but I'm going to speculate that you won't die of prostate cancer. You've held it off for 14 years now. During that time, a number of new treatments were discovered and approved that were not available at the time of your diagnosis - including Zytiga and others such as Provenge, Xtandi, Lu-177-PSMA, darolutamide, and more. You haven't come close to exhausting them and there are going to be more new ones in the coming years. So I think the combination of your success in holding the cancer at bay plus the arrival of new treatments is likely to keep you on your feet for the future.

Best of luck with it.

Alan

j-o-h-n profile image
j-o-h-n in reply toAlanMeyer

You know that I'm notaknowitalltypeofguy. Cured❔❔❔

Good Luck, Good Health and Good Humor.

j-o-h-n Tuesday 11/05/2019 8:10 PM EST

in reply toAlanMeyer

Thank you Alan for you response. It is a quandary as to what to do in July when both my Lupron and Zytiga/prednisone are scheduled to end after two years. Yes, I understand that I can stop and monitor my psa and see what happens. On the other hand, I have read comments on this web site, that men have continued with Zytiga/prednisone as long as it keeps on working. Guess I will have to decide closer to July as to continuing or not.

in reply toAlanMeyer

Alan thank you so much for your detailed response. At this point I have a few months before July when my meds will stop, and I know if I asked 50 people to get 50 different answers however, I liked what you wrote and I’m sure I’ll think about it closer to July

Thank you so much

Tall_Allen profile image
Tall_Allen

Sounds good so far. I think 2-3 years of hormone therapy is prudent when given with radiation for known lymph nodes. So far, so good.

Magnus1964 profile image
Magnus1964

If Lupron and xtandi fail you always have casodex or Zytiga to fall back on. After that there are still more treatments. Don't panic. Ride Lupron and xtandi for all you can get out of them.

Thanks. I am on Lupron and Zytiga 1000mg and Prednisone 5mg for 1.5 years. Don’t know about standing or casodex, but i am sure my oncologist does.

Ramp7 profile image
Ramp7

This was a good read. Similar case as you, Jif1. Twelve years since RP and eleven years since radiation treatment. Tomorrow I get my second (3 month) shot of Lupron. PSA presently at 0.4

Not what you're looking for?

You may also like...

SIXTEEN YEARS - SO FAR SO GOOD!

In January 2001, at age of 62, my Urologist leaned forward and told me the biopsies indicated...

my journey so far

Diagnosed with prostate cancer with Gleason scale of 8. I have had consults with my urologist,...
Laguy01 profile image

Where I'm at so far....

After a high PSA test result (26.2), an abnormal DRE and an MRI that was PIRADS-5 (high risk of...
mike__c profile image

Intermittent ADT

I am 72 years old. I am six years out from my RP. I had prostate bed radiation when my PSA began to...
rocketphd profile image

How to determine what is a normal PSA after radiation therapy?

As I understand it, when PCa is treated with radiation therapy, the theory is cancer cells are more...

Moderation team

Bethishere profile image
BethishereAdministrator
Number6 profile image
Number6Administrator
Darryl profile image
DarrylPartner

Content on HealthUnlocked does not replace the relationship between you and doctors or other healthcare professionals nor the advice you receive from them.

Never delay seeking advice or dialling emergency services because of something that you have read on HealthUnlocked.