From Deseret News archives:

Prostate-cancer patients have options

Published: Friday, Sept. 8, 2006 8:37 p.m. MDT
 |  E-MAIL | PRINT | FONT + - 
Men diagnosed with prostate cancer — there will be nearly a quarter-million new cases this year in America — have several treatment options to discuss with their doctors.

Lots of factors will drive the decision-making process, says Dr. Blake Johnson, urologist at LDS Hospital and Salt Lake Regional Medical Center. Prostate cancer is "staged" on a formula called a Gleason score, which looks at how aggressive it is and how advanced. The higher the score on a scale of two to 10, the more advanced the disease.

Johnson and Dr. George Middleton, urologist at Cottonwood Hospital, will discuss prostate problems, including prostate cancer, during today's Deseret Morning News/Intermountain Healthcare Hotline. They'll take phoned-in questions from 10 a.m. to noon. All calls are confidential.

"One difficulty is there are some who don't need treatment, but the problem is we don't know how to exclude those individuals. We don't know who really needs treatment and who would be OK to watch and not do anything. In general it's slow-growing and the survival rate for those with a low Gleason score is the same whether they have treatment or not," Johnson says.

Story continues below
For a kidney mass, it's a short, clear-cut discussion. "Prostate cancer is not like that; there are a lot of things to consider. This week or next month is probably not going to change it, although I don't recommend someone wait months and months."

"Watchful waiting" is most often selected when the cancer is not aggressive and the patient is elderly or has other significant health problems. Even then, the waiting is an active process, Johnson says, with repeat biopsies and prostate-specific antigen (PSA) measurements to see what it's doing. Significant change may alter the approach.

Because it's typically, although not always, a slow-growing cancer, many patients are apt to die of something else even if nothing's done, Middleton says.

Hormonal therapy is usually reserved for cases that have spread to the bone. "We try to drop the testosterone level in the body, since the cancer tends to be dependent initially on testosterone to grow," Johnson says. "It's not a cure usually, but it can help slow down the process and reduce pain."

Chemotherapy has not proven effective with prostate cancer, although it may be used palliatively to improve quality of life and treat pain, he says.

Comments

You can be the first to comment on this story.

Related content
previousnext

Latest comments

Just stop playing the darn game between the gentiles and the saints. Ends...

Great thinking on both the mom and the son!

What's the coach's wife doing on the sideline? What did she come down to...

Two more running for 2nd District

Good post Ryan, yes both websites work if you type them in after a nice www....

Hall reprimanded by MWC

Think about it Cougs. If you bench Hall at least you will have an excuse to...

Nice comment, Ernest T. Bass

Thank goodness it's over, now the irrelevant Maxi Hall can just go away....

Mike Richards, You brought it up, You're lecturing us all with your...

Boys basketball rankings

Liahona is in Pleasant Grove and is in Region 18 with Dugway, Wendover,...

I bumped into Robert Johnson one time. He is the only man that Chuck Norris...

Advertisements