The Importance of

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  • Опубликовано: 17 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 52

  • @Epark58
    @Epark58 Год назад +8

    Don’t know what we would do without these videos! You all are so informative and positive! Thank you so much.

  • @enzomac9139
    @enzomac9139 Год назад +8

    Thanks Alex & Dr S, this video is crown jewel for PCA treatment planning.

  • @MrGuitar1458
    @MrGuitar1458 Год назад +10

    Thanks as always for this great video. I was able to approach my potential pCa with an informed perspective thanks to the information I received on this channel. I was fortunate to be found (so far) cancer free, and I had an MRI first, then a trans-perineal biopsy based on those findings, which made the whole process easier to take, both physically and emotionally. I'm very grateful!

  • @robgerety
    @robgerety Год назад +21

    Great video. Thank you. I am 72. I am recently diagnosed. I am 4+3=7. My tumor involves nearly the entire prostate gland according to MRI. My prostate is not particularly large. My PSA is 17. My PSMA PET scan shows no spread to bones or organs but the radiology report indicates likely spread to pelvic area lymph nodes. Also the genetic testing shows me as very high risk of spread. My father had prostate cancer. Am I stage 5? My treatment plan right now is for 6 months of hormone treatment and 8-10 weeks of daily radiation of the entire gland and the identified lymph nodes. This all makes sense to me and so after an initial second opinion on the pathology report following biopsy at Johns Hopkins that confirmed my local pathology report I'm satisfied this is a good treatment plan. I am fortunate to live near a quality regional cancer center with high ratings. This is scary stuff. I was comforted somewhat when the urological surgeon and the radiology oncologist agreed that radiology and lupron is the best way to go. I have watched nearly all your videos, some more than once, and they have been very helpful.

    • @andrewgynn4502
      @andrewgynn4502 Год назад +2

      What you have is what i had just the same was stage 3tb psa was 20.58 had the prostate out this was at 53 . move on till this year psa had got back to 0.52 did 6 months of hormone and four weeks radiation psa is now 0.03 and they say all being well thats it sorted out. so go with there plan i would also say i feel fit and well.

    • @kellyrippin7712
      @kellyrippin7712 Год назад +1

      Hi!!! Thank you so much for sharing!!! God Bless You!!! My husband is on the same boat with you. 9of 12, one 4+4, and the rest 4+3=7 and some lymph nodes. He is on Lupron and Xtandi for 3 months now. Side effects aches, pains and very low energy. The Oncologist Urologist doctor is pushing hard want to do Holep surgery prior radiation, 6 months recovery from Holep sugery before radiation. His prostate is 80, medical oncologist doctor said it will shrink with hormones therapy, none of his prostate cancer patients have Holep surgery and none of them have problems with urinnary after radiation. Radiation doctor said 9-10 weeks EBRT prostate + IMRT lymph nodes. No Space OAR or Barrigel , doctor claims that it will interfere with radiation for the prostate. Then he said it costs money. We are very unhappy by this statement from the doctor. We have been doing all the research about Holep, none of the doctor recommended the procedure with prostate cancer patients. Do you have any side effects from Lupron and XTandi? What do you for aches and pains topical cream or medicine that we should ask our doctor? Do you have any side effects from radiation? Can you please share the do and don’t? Did your radiology oncologist use Barrigel or SpaceOAR?

    • @andrewgynn4502
      @andrewgynn4502 Год назад

      I have no urinnary problems at all the radiation was very easy no spaceoar was used hormone i had no aches or pains but i was very tired with it just got on with it made my self move as much as i could .@@kellyrippin7712

    • @robgerety
      @robgerety Год назад

      I have not yet started treatment. Expect to start in a week or so.@@kellyrippin7712

  • @steve122140
    @steve122140 Год назад +7

    Carry on with your educational perspective! I was diagnosed 5 years ago and had successful treatment. I thank your site for valuable insight. THANKS

  • @1958zed
    @1958zed Год назад +6

    I love Dr. Scholz, PCRI, and these videos. They have been educational and extremely helpful in my journey with prostate cancer. Your color-coded staging system, however, brings anything but clarity to the discussion. It's confusing and adds yet one more layer of terms patients must come to terms with.

    • @ThePCRI
      @ThePCRI  Год назад +1

      Thank you for the feedback! This will help us simplify things in the future.

  • @joethecomputerguy1
    @joethecomputerguy1 4 месяца назад +1

    I was diagnosed with Gleason 4+3 last week and already had 2 calls with your team. Absolutely nothing but GREAT things to say about them I was able to have much better conversations already with my doc. And I do have a great doc. He called me on a Sunday morning and spent 30 mins going over each question I had.

  • @melandyosgoodthings3142
    @melandyosgoodthings3142 8 месяцев назад

    As always very helpful and hopeful info. I am looking forward to getting more information from the PCRI website. Thank you

  • @Ed6013z10
    @Ed6013z10 Год назад +3

    Awesome video. I am scheduled for a MRI biopsy on the 21st. Trying to learn as much as I can and trying to stay positive. I find myself thinking dark thoughts about my future and videos like this gives me some hope. Thank you…

    • @edotero6331
      @edotero6331 Год назад +1

      listen its normal. I got my first 3 years ago. It came back 3/4 gleason and cancer. The good new Dr said I will be under active surveliance. I had a second 2 biopsy 2 years ago and I learn ed here I need to demand a MRI target Biophsy like my first one. Dr said MRI wasnt very good so he did random and sure, he did not find cancer. I would have syopped and said, give me another MRI. I do PSA every 6 month and it has gone down. I have an MRI next Feb and may have another biopshy if needed. So you have those thoughts but Prostate cancer treatments are much better than they used too. Some want to take it out although cause they are too anxious and dont want to deal it in 20 years. Well I will be 83 in 20 years. Long life and maybe they find a cure for it before that. Remember we can wait because there are so many other neg effects when prostate is removed. I am 63 and diagnosed ay 59 and half. These video are great and allow me to question my Dr on my treatment. Find a good urologist and get second opinions like I did if you dont feel confortable with the Dr.. Good luck, hope this helps. We are all in this journey, but as Dr on this video says, wait untill you get your Gleason first then, tackle as needed.

  • @vanadams742
    @vanadams742 10 месяцев назад +1

    You guys are great!!!!

  • @DCGreenZone
    @DCGreenZone Год назад +2

    Just watched a radio ligand video from Clarity.... their phase 1 trial produced some interesting results. Who knew copper could be so useful.

  • @CureSafe
    @CureSafe 4 месяца назад

    Very informative and Helpful video! 👏🌟

  • @kentoskentos8428
    @kentoskentos8428 6 месяцев назад

    Big, big video. Thank you so much for all you do for us.

  • @kennethlemanski7399
    @kennethlemanski7399 Год назад +2

    I am just starting this journey. I was diagnosed with a High Grade Prostate Cancer. PET Scan on Nov 21st.

    • @stitcheruk1150
      @stitcheruk1150 Год назад +1

      Hi. Also diagnosed High Grade in October with spread throughout bone skeleton. PSA310. Started with ADT Bicalutamide and Decapeptyl. What have you been prescribed so far? Please post for others and keep in touch. It all helps. Thanks

  • @edwardbertorelli7358
    @edwardbertorelli7358 Год назад +1

    Amazingly detailed and relevant discussion thanks as always...and you are correct..these videos affected how I treated my prostate cancer....side effects were on my mind...thanks

  • @AbdulHassen-b7y
    @AbdulHassen-b7y 9 месяцев назад

    What a great medical information

  • @rancancookcanoy9768
    @rancancookcanoy9768 Год назад

    Another great video. I really appreciate the work you are doing in this space. I just finished my radiation treatments and still doing hormone therapy. The staging colors and information was very helpful to me in making the decision on what treatment plan I was going to do. Thank You.

  • @markturner3290
    @markturner3290 11 месяцев назад +2

    Dear Dr Shultz and Alex. My name is Mark. I am 59 in Australia. I had a Psa done 3yrs ago it was 3.2 which did not qualify for an Mri and i was put on the waiting list. 6months ago. Psa was 7.2. Digi test, cancer. Biopsy i think 12 cores. Told I am a gleason 9 5-5. Had a PSMA. Said it hadnt escape the prostate yet but knocking on the inner wall of the shell. I have had 1 shot of Eligard and had a Turp done 3 weeks ago. 10wks to heal then start radiation. Sir is there still hope for me to live a few yrs with such a high gleason? Love to you all

  • @saroyaskendriyaviharkharar4457

    Thanks for sharing this valuable vedio.I was diagnosed two years back .TURP done now under treatment with inj pamoerline and

  • @peterb2346
    @peterb2346 Год назад

    This channel is such a GREAT resource. (We Happily made a small donation!) Upon your advice, I resent my Biopsy slides over to John Hopkins. They confirmed a 3+3=6 in 3 of the 12 zones w/ 5%-10% cancer found. The one sample from the lesion however does show 50% cancerous. And Decipher came back at .83 (High Risk). Should I still request a PSMA Scan?

  • @lisayvette1lee
    @lisayvette1lee Год назад

    Awesome video. My question, what are recommended treatment options for 3+3 Gleason 6, 59yr old?

  • @stevenvalett1231
    @stevenvalett1231 Год назад +4

    Very little limited info and communication with my health care team concerning Prostate Cancer treatment.

    • @RH-xd3nx
      @RH-xd3nx Год назад

      It's because they don't want you to leave, theres over 40 different treatment options. You're a cash cow, so they are tight-lipped....it happened to me

  • @zaheeruddinjaveed8694
    @zaheeruddinjaveed8694 10 месяцев назад +1

    I am 60 years old. My PSA is 21.8 now has doubled in the last 2 years. PSMA PET scan has revealed a start of tracer uptake. I don't want to undergo any invasive procedure like biopsy etc. What course of treatment options do I have. Thanks.

  • @m.cunningham9817
    @m.cunningham9817 Год назад +4

    I was never told what stage. Diagnosed 4 years ago with PSA 18. Spread to pelvic and lymph. Got radiation everyday for a month. currently on Lupron and Xtandi. Was told got around 5-6 more years to live

    • @RH-xd3nx
      @RH-xd3nx Год назад +4

      So sorry to hear that, I've prayed that you will live longer than their prognosis.

  • @gerard2620
    @gerard2620 11 месяцев назад

    Thank you from a recent subscriber !!! I just got my biopsy report yesterday: Gleason 4+4 in 3 cores, with a PSA of 2.1. The pathology report says stage 2a. I'm having a PMSA PET Scan in a week or so...I do have the BRCA2 gene mutation, so that sheds a different light on things, as to how the cancer may/may not behave......I'm not sure what other tests I may need (genomic testing?), as I'm very new to this.....Perhaps Dr. Scholz can offer thoughts ?? Thanks again !!

  • @elawton2
    @elawton2 10 месяцев назад

    My gleason is 3+3=6. Have had three MRI's (Two prior to my first biopsy with a different doctor)) Have prosieben genetic test indicating I have a 3.7 percent chance of dying in the next 10 years. Two cores out of twelve showed 5% cancer. PSA is 8 something. I'm 63 and the doctor wants to do another biopsy which I agreed to. If I had stuck with my first urologist I doubt a biopsy would have been ordered. What a mess, I'm so confused. My Dad had prostate cancer and surgery in his mid fifties, he lived to be 3 months shy of 94 years old and died May of 2023. He told me he would never have had it removed surgically as the cancer came back and he began taking hormone treatments every couple of years which would bring his PSA down from over 25 to almost zero. He was taking oral chemo pills his last years which really messed up his system. A lot has changed an this is a great RUclips channel! Thanks so much for the information!!!

  • @billdevine7792
    @billdevine7792 8 месяцев назад

    I am at stage 2 and Gleason 4+3. I haven't been able to get my Pet PMAS for six weeks. I was diagnosed 5 days after Thanksgiving 2023 and was wondering if stage 2 is and Gleason is there a good chance of moving to other parts of the body?

  • @77Cfriend
    @77Cfriend 11 месяцев назад

    Can they treat the cancer and bore-out the blockage at the same time? and does the fact that I had a catheter put in affect my PSA? it was 62 during retention then 37 then 26

  • @schmingusss
    @schmingusss 3 месяца назад +1

    Why is it that with all the advances in detection and treatment of prostate cancer that the death rate hasn't come down? The numbers are still essentially the same as they were more than 20 years ago.

  • @ronll9590
    @ronll9590 Год назад

    11:27 Another very informative video. Thanks! I’m not sure this is the proper place to ask this, but this is my first comment. I have Gleason 4+3, and have completed six weeks of proton therapy a month ago. I’m also on Lupron since April. I was never told about psmaPET scans but I had other scans of some type including a bone scan (negative). So my question is, would a psmaPET scan be useful now post treatment? Might it help me discontinue Lupron sooner if it shows no remaining cancer?
    Thanks.

  • @gordonames1892
    @gordonames1892 Год назад

    HAD A PSA TEST OF 7.3. HAD A BIOPSY SHOWED SOME CANCER. I'M ON A WAIT SND SEE PROGRAM. TRIED A PROGRAM NOT APROVED BY THE AMA. USING STUFF IN MY FOOD PANTRY, GOT MY PSA LEVEL AT 3.94!! PSA OF 4 IS NORMAL.

  • @b.friend898
    @b.friend898 29 дней назад

    If a royal staged prostate cancer, patient with more than 5 metastatic lesions to the bone And a beginning PSA of 545 responds to hormone treatment (That would be first and second generation ADT drugs) And six cycles of taxotere to Achieve a PSA of less than .1 and it stays that way for six months or more, should their scans be it pet scan orCT scan Or bone scan Show no active cancer? I have a PSA of less than .1 or almost 9 months now. I have had the triplet therapy described above. Yet my pet scan according to my radiologic oncologist, still shows cancer but not active so I’m confused

  • @mikeoniones667
    @mikeoniones667 Год назад +1

    I'm advance metistatic W Gleason score of 9 i am on Darolutamide going on 5 yrs.

    • @stitcheruk1150
      @stitcheruk1150 Год назад

      Hi. Have you also had Chemotherapy along with the Darolutamide? Is your diagnosis stable ? I’ve recently been advised a Gleason score of 9:with metastatic spread throughout the skeleton. Have started with ADT treatment with a suggestion of Darolutamide to follow.

  • @WallaceDunn
    @WallaceDunn 11 месяцев назад

    What Gleason 3+3 but Decipher and MRI are both High Risk? I’m thinking I’m not a candidate for active surveillance.

  • @gvet47
    @gvet47 Год назад +2

    How come when I was tokd in January that I have prostate cancer that is also in my lymph nodes. I have ver been told anything about this cancer. Why????
    Told to get my affairs in order????
    10 months and still no more information.
    So like when am I going to die? I'm 76

  • @grahammclean7842
    @grahammclean7842 6 месяцев назад

    I have a 3+3 with a psa of 12.7 and absence of tumour infiltration in the right lobe. Can anyone tell me if this is considered stage 1 or 2?

    • @ThePCRI
      @ThePCRI  6 месяцев назад

      Hello, we are not able to answer case questions on our comment section but we can help you through our Helpline who can speak with you either by phone or email. Here is the link to contact them: pcri.org/helpline

  • @gvet47
    @gvet47 Год назад +1

    I was told my PSA was 5000 so is that even possible?

  • @jimoncken6936
    @jimoncken6936 Год назад

    I think a prostate cancer doctor that wears a beard insults men who are chemically castrated.