Lupron Injections

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Comments

  • SPT
    SPT Member Posts: 40
    kluff said:

    Lupron a nightmare literally.

    Well written SPT,

    I have in the last year had most of the side effects you have listed thankfully minus heart attacks,but including nasal disturbance and yes horrible NIGHTMARES that wake me and give me panic attacks or diabetes.

    My QOL is zero as is that of my wife,i do not know how i will stand another year on this stuff and then hope it leaves my system.I have read that some never recover and that their pituitary gland does not kick in back to life,what a prospect.

    I am nearly 71 and my onco said he would give me 20 years but he did not say what it would be like,he gave no hint of what lupron could do to mind and body,maybe he had lupron brain and forgot lol.My short term memory is certainly not up to par.

    I still like a scotch now and again but even that can make me feel more depressed the next day,but we have to have some little treats to look forward to,because lupron has taken everything else i enjoy in life from me and my wife. 

    Good luck to all on this journey kluff.

    onco and QOL

    Kluff wrote "(my onco) gave no hint of what lupron could do to mind and body,maybe he had lupron brain and forgot lol."

    He or she didn't forget.  Pretty much all oncos, uros, and radiators assign zero weight to quality of life.  They say the words but there is no meaning to them.

    The onco and the rest get paid no matter what.  They count whatever torture they have inflicted as a success so long as you survive it.  It doesn't matter how badly it harms you or how long it takes to recover.  It doesn't matter at all if they can't see it on a scan or blood test.

    Their definition of success is that I have a pulse.  My standards are higher.  I'm not willing to sacrifice everying I am and all that I've enjoyed because I'm so afraid of deatch that I will clutch at straws even if it destroys me.  I will have a life worth living or I will die young, but I will not live 20 years as a bedwetting vegetable.

  • SPT
    SPT Member Posts: 40
    edited September 2017 #63
    can I get paid?

    Emptiness And Pain - Dilbert by Scott Adams

  • GeorgeG
    GeorgeG Member Posts: 152
    I chose 6 months of neo

    I chose 6 months of neo adjuvant Firmagon with salvage radiation after RP. Side effects are insomnia, injection site pain, memory loss, weight gain, hot flashes with epic sweating, and mood swings. They are manageable but not much fun. The data on if it helps or not depends on your situation but the studies show a general trend of improved outcome. A general theme is the sooner you start and the more aggressive your situation, the more it helps. There is another school of thought that you should wait until much later so that you don't become hormone refractory too soon and lose this bullet. Then there is the debate about how long and if intermittent or continuous is better. Six months is pretty doable, not sure what I will decide if I have to face more treatments in the future. My testoterone and PSA both became undetctable. Firmagon gets you 75% of the way there in just three days. That first couple of days are a liitle rough but then the mack truck that hit you goes away.

    George

     

  • red2dog
    red2dog Member Posts: 3
    edited September 2018 #65

    Sir Arnold Takemoto and LUPRON
    If it works for you then Go For It. However, a bit of web sleuthing suggests that Sir Arnold Takemoto is, in fact, a Knight of the Royal Order of the Oak (a fantasy order - http://www.chivalricorders.org/orders/self-styled/slfstlod.htm).

    Re. Lupron: I have been on it for about 9 months; only one obvious side-effect (occasional hot flushes and sweats that can last 5 or 10 minutes). There are several different injection plans. I get one every 4 months; intramuscular, gluteal; no big deal - just focus on muscle relaxation during the injection - and yes, there's a bit of muscle soreness for a day or so but not nearly as bad as the day after over-exercising after a layoff :-). The first injection forced my PSA from 12 back to 0.02 (borderline of detectability), where it has stayed since then.

    Prior to the Lupron, I had had a prostatectomy 3 years ago, (with PSA rebound) then targeted radiotherapy (again with PSA rebound), and finally this Lupron course (which seems to be keeping the PSA at practically-zero levels. My quality of life (QOL) is pretty good - the surgery did most to wreck it, due to incontinence and loss of libido, but the incontinence has lessened to the point where a single Tena pad per day copes with it OK (Unless I am out walking or hiking - then I need spares and really need to be aware of the situation). Non-walking exercise - gym, aerobics, weights, swimming, etc. are A-OK.

    I am aware that hormone-therapy is not "a cure", and I am expecting that the cancer cells (hiding somewhere in my system) will eventually mutate and develop resistance to the Lupron. The only question is "How Long will this take"? It probably varies with each case - we are all different. I have heard of other survivors who have been on it for several years and are doing OK.

    I sometimes wonder if I would have had better QOL if I had not had the prostatectomy and opted for just radiotherapy and hormone therapy.

    Sir Arnold and Lupron

    Les Likely  I agree with you on RPS.  I had it in 2007 and had the same problems as you now it's 2018 and I have just started Lupron 3 days ago. Feeling tired and achey, like flue without the fever.   hope you are still doing OK.

     

  • artie
    artie Member Posts: 62 Member
    Old Salt said:

    Individual reactions vary greatly

    The best that can be said about hormone therapy is that it may keep you alive longer. What's wrong with that?

    I was 'on' it for 18 months and certainly had side effects, but I did recover from them after some time.

    I was on Firmagon for 5 weeks

    I was on Firmagon for 5 weeks and had 5 radiation treatmens in Dec 2015.Mris and biopsy are all good.Feel good no side effects except osteopenia in hip.Have friend whose Dad has been o Lupron after radiation for many many years.Dad is still on it and he is 105.

  • Georges Calvez
    Georges Calvez Member Posts: 547 Member
    edited September 2018 #67
    Firmagon

    I have been on Firmagon for approaching six months now.
    I have had a few warm spells, maybe a bit of sweating but hard to tell as it went up to 35 C in the day and was at least middle twenties at night here for a few weeks.
    I have had insomnia but I listen to music at night while the wife sleeps on next to me and that helps. My physical libido has collapsed but my mind runs on, I remain interested in sex but with no physical reward; erection, orgasm, etc it is a bit of a waste of time on my side although I continue to have erotic dreams. I have not gained any weight but I do feel more tired if I work hard but that may be caused by the radical laparotic prostatectomy and the radiation. My testicles have gone from plums to muscats but body hair is pretty normal except where I had the radiation where it is a bit sparse. Penis size is about the same for girth but I would guess that I have lost an inch due to having my prostate chopped out. I have suffered from mood swings as well, I can cry at the drop of a souffle. I have these funny lapses of concentration, I can go to the bathroom and forget why I am there but my intellectual mind remains untouched.
    I control the pain of the injections with 400mg of ibuprofen morning and evening for two day before and after and then a couple of days on 200mg morning and evening. Get the injection done well away from the belt line and get the nurse to follow the instructions exactly, this is definitely not a stick it in and press the plunger.
    It looks like I am on this for the long term, two to three years, as I had an extensive but seemingly local and not very aggressive cancer so here's hoping I come out of the other end fairly OK but the cancer does not.
    My PSA was zero after a few weeks, I am hoping that it will remain zero through the ADT and maybe for some time or even indefinitely afterwards.
    Will prostate cancer kill me, maybe, but it will take several years at a minimum and maybe a lot longer, so I have credible odds of falling to one of the other scythes of the grim reaper.

  • RobLee
    RobLee Member Posts: 269 Member

    Firmagon

    I have been on Firmagon for approaching six months now.
    I have had a few warm spells, maybe a bit of sweating but hard to tell as it went up to 35 C in the day and was at least middle twenties at night here for a few weeks.
    I have had insomnia but I listen to music at night while the wife sleeps on next to me and that helps. My physical libido has collapsed but my mind runs on, I remain interested in sex but with no physical reward; erection, orgasm, etc it is a bit of a waste of time on my side although I continue to have erotic dreams. I have not gained any weight but I do feel more tired if I work hard but that may be caused by the radical laparotic prostatectomy and the radiation. My testicles have gone from plums to muscats but body hair is pretty normal except where I had the radiation where it is a bit sparse. Penis size is about the same for girth but I would guess that I have lost an inch due to having my prostate chopped out. I have suffered from mood swings as well, I can cry at the drop of a souffle. I have these funny lapses of concentration, I can go to the bathroom and forget why I am there but my intellectual mind remains untouched.
    I control the pain of the injections with 400mg of ibuprofen morning and evening for two day before and after and then a couple of days on 200mg morning and evening. Get the injection done well away from the belt line and get the nurse to follow the instructions exactly, this is definitely not a stick it in and press the plunger.
    It looks like I am on this for the long term, two to three years, as I had an extensive but seemingly local and not very aggressive cancer so here's hoping I come out of the other end fairly OK but the cancer does not.
    My PSA was zero after a few weeks, I am hoping that it will remain zero through the ADT and maybe for some time or even indefinitely afterwards.
    Will prostate cancer kill me, maybe, but it will take several years at a minimum and maybe a lot longer, so I have credible odds of falling to one of the other scythes of the grim reaper.

    Good luck Georges

    Good luck with your treatments Georges.  I had prostatectomy two years ago, adjuvant radiation last year and have been on Lupron rather than Firmagon.  Taking venlafaxine helped the hot flashes and with time the emotional volatility.  I understand the getting weepy over nothing.  But the brain fog has been the most disturbing.  I find myself doing some pretty stupid things, though no major financial blunders.  Hopefully this will be ending soon... for both of us.

  • Georges Calvez
    Georges Calvez Member Posts: 547 Member
    Thanks

    Thanks Rob Lee,

    Best of luck to you too.
    I think that everyone that has ever beeen on ADT was happy to see the last injection, I know that I will be having a glass of something extra special to celebrate my last shot and hoping that my poor balls will grow back a little.

    Best wishes,


    Georges

  • red2dog
    red2dog Member Posts: 3
    edited September 2018 #70
    Lupron with Casodex

    ? Does anyone being treated Casodex and Lupron know if Casodex has been removed from the treatment after awhile.   I have been on Casodex since 8/20/18 and Lupron since 9/5/18.  So far flu like symptoms w/o fever at the beginning, somedays fatigue, mild hot flashes  some day not.  Other wise not as bad as I had expected.  I have gone on a very low fat diet eating fish and high protien veggies and nofat cottage cheese(for natural calcium) and 600mg calicium  Losing weight and walking a mile a day.   Does any one know how to put these post in cronilogical order ?

     

  • kidclutch
    kidclutch Member Posts: 57 Member
    red2dog said:

    Lupron with Casodex

    ? Does anyone being treated Casodex and Lupron know if Casodex has been removed from the treatment after awhile.   I have been on Casodex since 8/20/18 and Lupron since 9/5/18.  So far flu like symptoms w/o fever at the beginning, somedays fatigue, mild hot flashes  some day not.  Other wise not as bad as I had expected.  I have gone on a very low fat diet eating fish and high protien veggies and nofat cottage cheese(for natural calcium) and 600mg calicium  Losing weight and walking a mile a day.   Does any one know how to put these post in cronilogical order ?

     

    My dad’s oncology team took

    My dad’s oncology team took him off of Casodex a month or so ago and went to Zytiga, because Zytiga is better for bone metastases. Not sure if that is standard progression, though!

  • SantaZia
    SantaZia Member Posts: 68 Member
    I have been on Lupron since

    I have been on Lupron since May 21, 2018. My last 3-month shot was August 18th. I have found that increasing my exercise has helped with hot flashes. Also, it has kept my weight down, but I do have an extra 5-7 lbs around my waist that I have never had. Besides drastically reducing your T mine is unreadable <7 and PSA .012 Lupron is a doping drug, according to the International Olympic Committee. If you increase your exercise you will build muscle. I have more muscle in my arms than I have ever had. Of course, I have never really consistently done resistance training, pushups etc. Recently I hurt my knee just working at my stand up desk which I have used for 25 years. I was blaming this on Lupron, but I believe I may have twisted it. I run 20 to 30 miles a week and injuries happen. Generally, this is a temporary treatment and the side effects are transitory. I still have sex with sildenafil. Although no interest at all. I just have to remind myself to do it.  I left on the water on a tree yesterday and just happened to walk by it when it was overflowing.  Various memory laps during this 4-month experience.  Today I will add my first day of radiation treatment to the mix.  I am expecting to have to fight fatigue with additional exercise. The treatment for cancer can be even worse, but hopefully, the long-term outcomes for everyone will be worth it.  

     

  • carole37
    carole37 Member Posts: 1
    edited October 2018 #73
    My husband has been taking

    My husband has been taking Lupron for several years, now it seems he has become immune to it.  His PSA is rising.  What would the next step be?

  • Old Salt
    Old Salt Member Posts: 1,530 Member
    Yes

    Georges is correct. There are options if Lupron fails. But we need more info on your husband's (medical) status to advise properly.

  • Georges Calvez
    Georges Calvez Member Posts: 547 Member
    More information

    Hi Carole,

    Welcome to the board.
    Can you give us some more information about his previous treatment eg prostatectomy and / or radiation, length of time on Lupron and other drugs, level of PSA and times, age, etc?
    Someone on here is bound to have a good idea or even had around the same treatment as your husband.
    A rising PSA can be anything between not serious and a nasty problem, lots of men battle rising PSA for years with great success, so do not worry too much for now.

    Best wishes,

    Georges