Salvage radiation after surgery, when to start?
The standard salvation treatments started when PSA reached 0.2 after surgery but I have read that some cancer centers started treatments when PSA reached 0.1. There is a fear of early treatments as they may caused more harm than good as the prostate is no longer there to shielded other organs. I have recently read the attached article and Wondering if anyone has been successful treated after reaching PSA 0.1 and remaining undetectable.
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Hi,
When you talk about the Prostate not shielding other organs the use of Proton therapy comes to mind. Proton has a fixed length beam and does not go past the intended target.
Dave 3+4
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The decision regarding when to start salvage radiation depends on the specific situation/case at hand. My surgeon was reasonably sure that the PCa had left the prostate when he extracted it, and so they decided to start salvage radiation, when my PSA reached 0.10 one year later (My first PSA reading post-surgery was 0.05).
Was the salvage radiation successful? It depends on how you measure success. I went 36 months after salvage radiation, before my PSA became detectible again. Since then, I've had SRBT radiation on a local metastasis in my pubic bone and 2 years on an aggressive hormone cocktail.
12 years after my initial PCa diagnosis, I'm still here and enjoying the quality of life that I've been afforded.
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Thanks all.
ClevelandGuy, I don’t know a lot about Proton but It appears that a lot of people have SBRT for salvage treatments. I will looking into it.
Josephg , that’s great to hear about your situation. It must be a really tough 2 years of ADT that you have had.We would like to get second opinions about salvage treatments just in case if my PSA reached 0.1 later on as my doctors said they would not doing anything unless my PSA reached 0.2 . From what I have read, the BCR rates are lower if re treatments are done at .01 instead of waiting until PSA reached 0.2 or higher.
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Josephg- What did you have for salvage treatmentswhen your PSA reached .1 then? I was assuming that’s what you had. Someone I talked to received salvage treatments when his PSA reached 0.11. His doctor wanted to be aggressive with his treatments, but he opted out of ADT.
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When my PSA reached 0.10, my Oncologist put me on a 6 month ADT regimen with Lupron and Casodex. Then they started IMRT treatments to the prostate bed. 35 sessions, 68 grays of radiation. Yes, they were aggressive, but my cancer care center is aggressive with their PCa treatments.
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The standard is salvage at .2 and I think that’s too late. My doctor suggested PSMA PET at .2 and I am trying to get second opinions just in case. Did you have that scan before salvage treatments? From what I understand, it would not detected anything at that low PSA level so radiologists just radiate the prostate bed and lymph nodes.
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Yes, at 0.10, they did not perform any scans, as they were of the opinion that the remaining PCa was likely to be in the prostate bed, and my PSA was still too low to likely see any specific tumors with the scans. So, they went directly to irradiate the prostate bed.
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One month after prostatectomy, my PSA was 0.01. Three and a half months later, it is now 0.24. I meet my urologist this coming Monday. I don't mind saying that I am freaking out. I thought the surgery would take care of it.
I'm 61 and otherwise in excellent health.
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The Indiana University (IU) network labs use an Abbott Laboratories assay with a threshold of .008 ng/mL (i.e. undetectable is <.008). I bounce between undetectable and .010, the latter being within the tests margin of error. I believe newer tests exist that drop the threshold even lower (to.003).
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There are two types of PSA assay. One is the 'regular' one; the other one is the ultrasensitive one. There are also at least two different instruments for the ultrasensitive assay. The one mentioned above (Abbott) and the LabCorp one. The sensitivity may vary juist a bit.
The ultrasensitive assay is most often used after prostate surgery.
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