What is prostate cancer?
Prostate cancer is a disease that
affects men from around the age of 45 years. It
involves the prostate gland, which is a small
gland about the size of a walnut, positioned just
beneath the bladder, and is responsible for
producing fluids that nourish and protect sperm.
Since the urethra (the tube that carries urine
from the bladder) passes through the centre of the
prostate gland, any growth within the gland will
cause pressure on the urethra, causing
difficulties in passing urine.
The disease is the commonest male cancer in the
UK. Around 20,000 men in this country are
diagnosed each year. Sadly, approximately 10,000
British men die of prostate cancer every year, so
it is a disease that needs to be taken very
seriously. Because we do not routinely screen for
prostate cancer in the UK, the disease is very
often detected only when it has spread away from
the prostate gland to other parts of the body.
Why or how do I get
prostate cancer and how can it progress?
It is still not entirely clear why
some men develop prostate cancer and others do
not. However, we do know that there are both
genetic and environmental factors that can
influence it.
In terms of genetic factors, you have a higher
risk of developing prostate cancer if your father
or brother had prostate cancer, although the
increased risk is relatively small.
Perhaps more important are environmental factors
such as diet and lifestyle. Vegetarians are half
as likely to develop cancer as meat eaters. When
we look at geographical differences, people living
in the Far East such as the Chinese and Japanese
have an extremely low risk of developing prostate
cancer compared with those who live in Western
countries such as America and Britain.
Scientists are currently investigating whether
certain dietary factors may help to prevent
prostate cancer. Much of this work is focussing on
the mineral selenium and a substance from
processed tomatoes called lycopene. Several very
large studies have shown that both these agents
lower the risk of developing prostate cancer.
- You
cannot catch prostate cancer through sex, nor
can you infect your partner with prostate
cancer.
-
Smoking is not linked to the occurrence of
prostate cancer.
-
Vasectomy was once thought to predispose men to
prostate cancer but this is no longer considered
to be the case.
Prostate cancer generally takes a long time to
progress and it can take 10 years before it is
detected. However, some men have a particularly
aggressive form of the disease, and the disease
can grow and spread more quickly. The cancer has a
great tendency to grow on the outside edge of the
prostate gland and can therefore easily break away
from the gland itself. Once it does this, it tends
to travel almost exclusively to the bones
including the hip bones, lower spine and ribs.s
What are the symptoms?
If the prostate gland grows
significantly for any reason, it can put pressure
on the urethra, and this may cause various
problems. Common symptoms include:
-
frequent visits to the bathroom to pass urine (frequency)
-
having to wake up regularly throughout the night
to pass urine (nocturia)
- a
sense of urgency in getting to the bathroom in
time (urgency)
-
hesitation before the urine begins to flow (hesitancy).
-
pain while passing urine
-
blood in the urine
-
impotence (inability to sustain an erection)
- hip
or lower back pain.
It is
very important to emphasise that the presence of
such symptoms does not necessarily mean you have
prostate cancer. Indeed, any problem with the
prostate will generally lead to some of these
symptoms, which can include prostatitis - a
prostate infection - or benign prostatic
hyperplasia (BPH) - a non-cancerous enlargement of
the prostate gland. However, if you do have any of
these symptoms, please consult your doctor since
the earlier they are treated the better.
Equally important to emphasise is that many men,
especially those in the early stages of the
disease, do not develop symptoms at all.
Therefore, a lack of symptoms does not always mean
that you are free from the disease, and further
tests will be needed to confirm this.
How is prostate cancer
diagnosed?
There are two very simple and
painless tests that can help to diagnose prostate
cancer. Firstly, a test will be carried out to
measure levels of prostate specific antigen (PSA)
in the blood. The other test that can be carried
out is a digital rectal examination (DRE).
- PSA
is a protein produced exclusively by the
prostate gland. All men have a small amount of
PSA in their bloodstream (around 4ng/ml). If
this level rises, and it can reach 3000ng/ml or
more in some men, your GP may wish to refer you
to a specialist for further tests.
- A
DRE involves the doctor placing a finger inside
your back passage and feeling the prostate gland
to check its size and shape and whether any
lumps can be detected. Although not very
pleasant, this should not hurt in any way.
Although neither test is 100 per cent accurate,
taken together they can alert the doctor to any
possible concerns. Your doctor may also take into
account your age, since prostate cancer generally
affects men over the age of 50 years, and he may
also ask about any family history of prostate
cancer.
What else could it be?
A raised PSA does not necessarily
mean that you have prostate cancer. Almost any
condition that causes the prostate gland to grow
or swell will result in a raised PSA test result.
PSA also rises slightly as you get older.
Similarly, a DRE can be very difficult to
interpret and may require the expertise of a
doctor with specialised knowledge.
What can your doctor do?
If a prostate gland feels large and
smooth on a DRE, then this generally indicates BPH,
which is not life threatening and can be treated
in many ways. However, if it feels lumpy, then
there may be cause for concern and this will
require further tests.
Equally, the PSA result can be high in men with
BPH or prostatitis as well as in those with
prostate cancer. There tends to be a very grey
area when the PSA is between 4 and 10ng/ml, and
such a result could indicate various prostate
conditions. However, if the PSA increases above
10ng/ml, your doctor will almost certainly want to
send you for further tests. Always take a pen and
notepad (or perhaps your partner or friend) to the
consultations that you have with your doctor. This
will enable you to remember what has been said to
you and will help you discuss your condition with
others later on.
In men with suspected cancer, a referral is
usually made to a specialist known as a urologist.
The urologist will usually repeat some of the
tests that you have already had and may then carry
out a rectal ultrasound and biopsy to understand
the cause of your symptoms. Here, a small probe is
placed inside the back passage, which emits
ultrasound waves (similar to those used to see
unborn babies in the womb) that provide an image
of the prostate gland and its surrounding tissue.
The urologist can then insert tiny needles into
the gland to take small biopsy samples.
This tissue can then be analysed under a
microscope to give a much clearer understanding of
the cause of the problem. You will be given
antibiotics during this time to prevent any
possible infections after the biopsy. You may also
notice a small amount of blood in your urine or
faeces. This is not usually a problem, but if it
persists you must consult your doctor.
How is prostate cancer
treated?
If prostate cancer has been
detected in the biopsy specimens, you now have
several difficult choices to make with regard to
treatment. The way the disease is treated depends
on many factors, including your age and the size
and grade of your cancer.
The biopsy specimen is often given a score (1-10,
known as a Gleason grade, with a score of two
representing the least aggressive form of the
disease and a score of 10 the most aggressive
cancer. Very often, the lower-grade cancers can be
left alone and will not grow significantly or
spread. However, higher-grade cancers
(particularly those over a Gleason grade of seven)
will often be treated with either surgery or
radiotherapy. Another important factor is whether
the cancer is fully contained within the prostate
gland or whether it has spread to other parts of
the body.
Surgery
For localised
cancers (those which are contained) it is
possible to remove the entire gland in an
operation called a radical prostatectomy.
Here, the surgeon makes an incision in your
lower abdomen and takes out the whole prostate
gland and then re-connects your urethra to your
bladder. This is a tricky operation and requires
a very skilled surgeon to avoid cutting through
the nerve bundles that surround the prostate
gland. Because of the likelihood of some nerve
damage, impotence is a common problem, and
around 70 per cent of men will not be able to
achieve a natural erection after the operation.
There is also a slight risk of incontinence,
with around 40 per cent of men experiencing
minor dribbling and approximately 2 per cent of
men requiring the long-term use of incontinence
pads. However, surgery is one of the best-tested
treatments and is thought to be very effective,
provided that the cancer is contained within the
prostate gland.
Radiotherapy
This technique can
also be used to treat contained cancers. It can
be done in several ways. In external
beam radiotherapy, radioactive beams
are aimed at the prostate from outside the body.
However, radiotherapy beams cannot distinguish
between normal and cancerous cells, so the beams
need to be focussed very carefully on the
prostate gland itself. A newer method, known as
3D conformal radiotherapy, is
now used in many hospitals. This technique
involves feeding the co-ordinates of the
prostate (size, shape, position) into a
computer, which then shapes the beams to fit the
prostate to limit the damage to normal tissue.
There are fewer side effects with this
treatment, with around 40 per cent of men
becoming impotent and around 2 per cent of men
experiencing incontinence. Because 3D conformal
radiotherapy has only been available for a few
years, we are not certain of its effectiveness,
but studies should be completed soon to give a
fuller understanding.
Brachytherapy
This is type of
radiotherapy involves placing radioactive seeds
inside the prostate gland itself, thereby
delivering radiation directly to the cancer. In
this procedure, the doctor inserts needles into
the prostate gland under anaesthesia and then
passes the seeds through the needles into the
gland, where they remain forever. The seeds
eventually lose their radioactivity and become
ineffective. Because there is no need for
surgery, the procedure can generally be carried
out in a day or two, and you should be able
return to normal life immediately. Around 3 in
10 men will become impotent after brachytherapy,
and a small number of men will experience a
burning sensation while urinating, although this
normally disappears within weeks. Brachytherapy
in its current form is a relatively new
technique, but new studies have monitored men
for 10 years and found it to be comparable to
surgery in its ability to destroy the cancer.
Watchful waiting
Because some
cancers grow very slowly, it is sometimes
appropriate to do very little. Known as watchful
waiting, this is especially appropriate for men
in their 70s whose cancer may grow so slowly
that it will not alter their life expectancy.
However, it can be very difficult to be told
that you have cancer and that it is not going to
be treated. It is important to remember that
your doctor will continually monitor the
progression of your cancer through PSA tests and
will act if necessary to prevent it from
spreading.
Hormone therapy
If the cancer has
already spread from the prostate gland by the
time it has been detected, it will normally be
treated with hormone therapy. Prostate cancers
require the male hormone testosterone to grow
and spread. Therefore, if you deprive the cancer
of testosterone, the cancer is starved. Hormone
therapy does just that, and although it will not
completely remove the cancer, it can place it on
hold for several years and can relieve a number
of symptoms including bone pain and urinary
problems.
Hormone therapy can also be used in men whose
cancer has spread slightly, because this
treatment can kill some of the cancer and will
shrink the remaining gland, making it easier to
then be treated with either surgery or
radiotherapy.
How do you live with
prostate cancer?
Ironically, prostate cancer itself
may not cause you too many problems, whereas the
treatment of the disease itself may do. Many men
are diagnosed through screening tests and have no
symptoms at all until they are subsequently
treated. The most common problems resulting from
treatment are impotence and incontinence. However,
a diagnosis of cancer is enough to frighten
anybody, so you may well experience some
psychological effects such as depression.
In most men, impotence can now be treated very
effectively with various therapies including
injections, vacuum pumps and tablets such as
Viagra (sildenafil). It is very important to ask
your specialist about the risk of impotence if you
would like to maintain a physical relationship.
Your doctor can also refer you to an impotence
adviser who can help you to find the most suitable
treatment for you and your partner.
Incontinence can be more difficult to manage and
men often resort to wearing incontinence pads.
However, there are other devices, and your doctor
can refer you to an incontinence nurse, who will
help you find the best solution to the problem. In
extreme cases it is also possible to have a
surgical operation to minimise incontinence.
Above all, there is no right or wrong way to deal
with your diagnosis. If you feel like sharing your
experiences with somebody, there are plenty of
organisations and support groups that can provide
extra information for you, your family and even
your friends. If desired, they can also put you in
touch with other men with the condition. It is
very important to become informed about this
disease before you select a treatment. By arming
yourself with knowledge of the various pros and
cons of each treatment, you can make an informed
choice that is right for you. |