Prostate Cancer Early Stage Treatment:
Prostate
Cancer Stages
You
may wonder whether your treatment options vary depending on far advanced your
prostate cancer might be. The truth is, if your cancer has grown beyond the
confines of your prostate gland, there is no currently known cure.
Prostate cancer is defined in 4 stages called T1, T2, T3 and T4.
Stage
T1 is when the disease is beginning. Only a blood test for PSA levels followed
by a biopsy on some prostate tissue will discover whether cancer has taken root
in your prostate gland.
Stage
T2 is when the first signs and symptoms will appear. Your doctor may find a
hard area on your prostate through a digital rectal exam. You may experience
bladder problems like difficulties in controlling urination. You may find blood
in urine or semen. You may feel pain or burning during urination or orgasm.
(Note that these can be due to other medical conditions and not cancer.) Tests
will tell how many tumors there are and whether the prostate is enlarged.
Stage
T3 is the point at which the cancer has spread outside the prostate gland.
Typically it will take residence in the seminal vesicles at this stage.
T4
is the final stage and the one with the most radical symptoms including
fatigue, anemia and many difficulties with passing waste through urine or
feces.
What
Are My Treatment Options?
Your
options for treatment have a good chance of a cure provided you catch it in
stage T1 or T2. If you are diagnosed with prostate cancer your doctor will
discuss those options with you. Those options include surgery, radiotherapy, cry
therapy or HIFU.
The
most common surgical option recommended is a prostatectomy where your prostate
gland is removed entirely. Some men may not be candidates for surgery due to
age or health.
Radiotherapy
can be done with an external beam where a radioactive source is aimed at your
prostate from outside or with a number of small radioactive seeds implanted
directly into your prostate. Both of these procedures use the same principle of
burning away diseased tissue with radioactivity.
Cry
therapy is a procedure where your prostate is frozen and then thawed. The
tissue in your gland cannot survive the temperature changes and the cancerous
cells are killed.
HIFU
stands for High Intensity Focused Ultrasound. Sound waves are focused and aimed
at cancerous tissue within your prostate. When they strike the tissue, the
cells are heated and the cancer cells are destroyed. This non-surgical
treatment is done on an out-patient basis and results in fewer significant side
effects than the other treatments.
Watching
and Waiting
An
option your doctor may recommend even if cancer has been verified is to watch
and wait; your cancer is monitored to determine how aggressive it is while a
final decision is made as to your best treatment option. This may be done if
there are medical complications that would affect your ability to recover from
some treatments, especially options like surgery or radiotherapy. It may also
be done if you're having difficulty giving consent for a treatment your doctor
has prescribed. If the cancer is aggressive, this will not be an option.
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