Urologist vs. Oncologist?: I was... - Prostate Cancer A...

Prostate Cancer And Gay Men

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Urologist vs. Oncologist?

lavis profile image
7 Replies

I was diagnosed with Prostate Cancer in November of 2012.

At that time, my PSA was 8 and my Gleeson was 5 + 4= 9.

I started Guided Radiation Therapy, at Scripp's Radiation Center, in La Jolla, in January 2013.

I started Lupron Therapy, in November of 2012. (2 years worth)

In December of 2016 I experienced Radiation Cystitus.

A very terrible experience that causes blood clots, in your bladder and blocks your ability to urinate.

I had 40 treatmets of Hyperberic Therapy, in 1917.

It resolved my Bladder issue.

I have my PSA tested every 3 months..

I have had a slight increase every 3 months.

However, my last test my PSA jumped to 0.33 from 0.14.

I am having my PSA tested again, at the end of this month.

According to a post my T. Allan, he suggests seeing a Urologist as opposed to a Oncologist.

His advice really startled me.

Now, I am thinking about dropping my Oncologist and going back to my Urologist.

My Oncologist just said he would put me back on Lupron if my PSA continues to rise.

Any input would be greatly appreciated.Read less

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lavis
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spencoid2 profile image
spencoid2

I have had a similar experience to yours, however I had external radiation and also brachytherapy plus Lupron. Also had Gleason 9 and a high PSA at diagnosis. PSA has recently gone up considerably higher than yours and it confused my urologists (had two due to living in two places. A couple of people on this list suggested that I needed a medical oncologist to try to make sense out of the PSA, auxumin (sp) PET/CT scan. My urologist referred me to a local medical oncologist and I was very impressed with his no nonsense approach. We now have a plan that I feel good with. My urologist who is mainly a surgeon did not feel confident to develop such a plan on his own. I respect him even more for making this clear. The oncologist was easy to talk to and we discussed every opinion and option I have gotten from others and he did not take offense at my bombarding him with information and questions. In my case I think a medical oncologist was a very important addition to my health team.

lavis profile image
lavis in reply to spencoid2

Hi Spencoid

Thank you for your reply.

Very helpful information.

Encourages me to stay with my Oncologist

Good luck to you and thanks again.

spencoid2 profile image
spencoid2 in reply to lavis

my psa is now at 12.79 which is why i am concerned. still it is the doubling time that indicates the amount of and aggressiveness of the cancer. i would certainly watch your psa and track its acceleration or doubling time but i would probably not rush into Lupron treatment unless you tolerate it well. even with my high psa and fairly fast doubling time, my oncologist thinks i can finish some construction projects and go for a one month vacation before being turned into a slug with lupron. he says that the PC has obviously metastasized and that there is no cure for this but there are treatments and new ones all the time. no reason to rush into anything. was nice to have time to get my new 9 ft player piano assembled. this involved heavy lifting and coordination that would have been difficult the way i respond to Lupron. should be able to enjoy it even on Lupron now that the heavy work is done.

lavis profile image
lavis in reply to spencoid2

Thank you, your response is very helpful and I appreciate your taking time to respond to my post.

I dread the Lupron too

Good luck with your Piano assembly, sounds like a very big task.

Ram17 profile image
Ram17

Hi,

Have you talked with your doctor about using Casodex ? It's a chemotherapy pill that is supposed to block the T-receptors in the cancer cells. This is what I am doing.

Had robotic surgery to remove the prostate April 2017. Numbers never zeroed out. Went back in to take out more lymph nodes. None found. Was told Lupron and radiation. Said no emphatically. Told doctor to think outside of the box. Lupron would surely put me in a wheelchair. Side effects have been minimal and bearable. Still getting around. New job has me traveling all the time.

I would try casodex before starting Lupron. My numbers finally went to non detect. If current doc says it's not standard protocol, then change doctors. You don't want standard. This is about YOU and you are not standard.

Good luck.

lavis profile image
lavis in reply to Ram17

Thank you for your input.

I definitely keep it on, things to discuss with my Oncologist.

I did manage okay on Lupton but it sure was not easy.

lavis profile image
lavis in reply to lavis

Hi again, Ram17!

Just got my 3 month PSA Test Results back.

My last PSA was 0.33, it had almost tripled from what it had been.,

My new PSA was 0.14. That is close to what it has been, for the lat few years.

I have no idea why it changed so much.

I am just thankful that it did.

I will have it checked again, in 3 months.

However, I will save your information, in case it raises again.

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