Focal Therapy for

Sdílet
Vložit
  • čas přidán 24. 02. 2023
  • RSVP Now! 2023 Mid-Year Prostate Cancer Patient Conference (In-Person & Virtual):
    pcri.org/2023-myu
    Here, Medical Oncologist Mark Scholz, MD, discusses the ins and outs of focal therapy and what the potential sexual side effects may be.
    Don’t know your stage? Take the quiz: Visit www.prostatecancerstaging.org
    To learn more about prostate cancer visit www.pcri.org
    Sign up for our newsletter here to receive the latest updates on prostate cancer and the PCRI: pcri.org/join
    Who we are:
    The Prostate Cancer Research Institute (PCRI) is a 501(c)(3) not-for-profit organization that is dedicated to helping you research your treatment options. We understand that you have many questions, and we can help you find the answers that are specific to your case. All of our resources are designed by a multidisciplinary team of advocates and expert physicians, for patients. We believe that by educating yourself about the disease, you will have more productive interactions with your medical professionals and receive better individualized care. Feel free to explore our website at pcri.org or contact our free helpline with any questions that you have at pcri.org/helpline. Our Federal Tax ID # is 95-4617875 and qualifies for maximum charitable gift deductions by individual donors.
    The information on the Prostate Cancer Research Institute's CZcams channel is provided with the understanding that the Institute is not engaged in rendering medical advice or recommendation. The information provided in these videos should not replace consultations with qualified health care professionals to meet your individual medical needs.
    #ProstateCancer #MarkScholzMD #PCRI

Komentáře • 35

  • @mah1788
    @mah1788 Před 5 měsíci +4

    Thank you from the uk if i had the money i would let mr scholz treat me, having prostate cancer is bad enough but choosing the right treatment is a minefield your videos have been a massive help, thank you very very much 😊

  • @steveg6978
    @steveg6978 Před rokem +9

    What if you have two lesions , one on each side. One is Gleason 6, the other is Gleason seven. Can one still do focal on the Gleason 7.

  • @robertmizek3315
    @robertmizek3315 Před rokem +6

    I had focal brachytherapy on 1/2 of my prostate with Dr. Brian Moran from DuPage Medical in the Chicago area. I’m cancer free since 2020 and have zero problems with ED or urinary issues.

    • @VimMitt
      @VimMitt Před rokem

      Please help me because i chose brachtherapy and would like to explore more. I have three small cancer in prostate which needs to be removed by this.

    • @schmingusss
      @schmingusss Před 17 dny

      Did you get the seeds that you leave in your prostate or the ones that come out?

    • @spitfirekid1
      @spitfirekid1 Před 17 dny

      ⁠@@schmingusss I received low-dose brachytherapy, which are the seeds that stay permanently in you. Unfortunately, 3 years later I found out that my biopsy missed significant high risk disease, and that focal brachytherapy was not appropriate treatment. I now have stage 3 metastatic prostate cancer, have had surgery to remove the prostate, am on androgen, deprivation therapy, and receiving radiation. My point in sharing this is before you pick any treatment, make certain that you’ve had a biopsy that you can trust. The gold standard today is an MRI guided fusion transperineal biopsy and I suggest you explore that if you have not already received one.

    • @schmingusss
      @schmingusss Před 17 dny

      @@spitfirekid1 Thank you for posting this and helping other people out.

  • @pinotwinelover
    @pinotwinelover Před 2 měsíci

    Well, I do know who's an intervention radiologist. Dr. David woodroom at the mayo clinic is doing my cryotherapy tomorrow. He's been doing that since 09.
    He may be on par with the doctor from ensure that the tire so definitely put his name in the mix. I'll report back I'll be in a five-year research study after tomorrow, April 24, 2024.
    It looks like my research he has done as many or more than any doctor in the United States any also because of his expertise in interventional radiology ablation other type, tumors on other organs, besides prostate

  • @stakwalderbak5331
    @stakwalderbak5331 Před rokem +3

    Thank you from Oz.This series of PCRI videos are outstanding and reassuring for me as a recently diagnosed cancer patient.

  • @mikerose6835
    @mikerose6835 Před rokem +4

    Thank you from Australia.

  • @colemant6845
    @colemant6845 Před 7 měsíci +1

    Can you do a Video on Re-Current Prostate Cancer after Radiation Therapy. It is SO much more complex and a still Unknown treatment. (Cryo, Hormonal, Surgery... etc. ) Your Experiences and Opinions would make a very informative Video. Thank You

  • @coilnchamberlain6506
    @coilnchamberlain6506 Před rokem +3

    Thank you from Australia.I learn so much from your professional information.Thank you.Please keep up this great work.

  • @rickwashek478
    @rickwashek478 Před rokem +7

    My medical oncologist retired in December. He had me on Lupron Depot 22.5mg. and Casadex. This was for return of prostate cancer from 8 years ago. Just seen new oncologist this week. She told me Casadex is an old drug that is no longer used. My PSA went from 214 to 39 and now is just over 5. So it seems to me that the treatment is working. So my question is. Do doctors still use Casadex for treatment?.

    • @robertmonroe3678
      @robertmonroe3678 Před rokem

      In an earlier PCRI video, I gave a quick look but can't find it, Dr Scholz, does talk at length about Casodex. As I recall he noted how well-tolerated it is, its current role in therapy, and the fact it seems to be less-often prescribed and why that is.

  • @suzannahwhite4292
    @suzannahwhite4292 Před rokem +11

    Thank you from the UK! This is such a great resource. I have a question: My partner has/had prostate cancer and is on ADT and Enzalutamide, plus he underwent 39 sessions of IMRT; what is the "tissue" that is left after radiotherapy please? If the radiotherapy kills the cancer cells, what's remaining? It's not like the prostate is "empty" so what's left? Thank you.

    • @Lola.1952
      @Lola.1952 Před rokem +1

      That's my question too.

    • @derickdevindavis
      @derickdevindavis Před rokem +2

      If I understand your question correctly, and, I'm only guessing, the left over cells should be both dead "healthy" cells as well as dead "cancer" cells in that treated area. The untreated area (assuming no cancer was there thus the reason why it left untreated) should be health, normal prostate cells which produce a PSA value only from "healthy", untreated prostate cells. Thus, routine MRIs would be needed to keep an eye on that area in conjunction with a new baseline PSA that doesn't abnormally rise (abnormal velocity in the rise). This part of the video appears to talk about that aspect. czcams.com/video/8EjG5m7y0vA/video.html

    • @willbraswell4906
      @willbraswell4906 Před rokem

      I'm no expert but a recent video I watched made a comparison for their explanation... they said to think of when a woman gets her breast(s) radiated. The radiated tissue doesn't disappear or go away, it just gets radiated so the cancer cells are poisoned to stop them from multiplying.

  • @billyjohnson9166
    @billyjohnson9166 Před rokem +2

    You both are great. Thank you

  • @MrGuitar1458
    @MrGuitar1458 Před rokem +2

    Great information as always. Thank you both!

  • @mperloe
    @mperloe Před rokem +2

    It's important to consider if the disease is focal and has not spread beyond the prostate. Another consideration is that the MRI often understates the actual tumor size. Most insurance does not pay for focal treatment for cancer so out of pocket expense is often quite large. Are there well designed studies that show that Focal therapy is any better than AS?

  • @daisuke6072
    @daisuke6072 Před rokem +1

    Practitioner is important, however I understand that different types of FT may be suitable for differently located cancers e.g. apical v peripheral

  • @bigike1313
    @bigike1313 Před rokem +1

    Those interested should check out Tulsa-Pro. Highly controlled and specific but also can treat BPH.

  • @Neilpedersen
    @Neilpedersen Před 10 měsíci +1

    Hello, Thanks for sharing such helpful information. With one Gleason 7 (3+4) lesion is 5% grade 4 and 3 lesions of grade 6 on both sides of the gland. Does anyone know if that qualifies for focal therapy?

  • @foropera
    @foropera Před 4 měsíci +1

    You are not talking about “focal brachytherapy” (for low-risk or “favorable intermediate” prostate cancer). Is it because, as they say in France, there were too many cancer recurrences when they tried it?

  • @gerrym5299
    @gerrym5299 Před 8 měsíci +1

    I have a PSA of 9.7, elevating over a period of 12 years. MRI/Bone Scan and a PSMA all point to an area on the left outside of my prostate, with no further spread. Two weeks ago I started Degrelex (2 shots) and am having side effects of constipation/diarrhea, headaches, hot flashes... which I believe are 'common'. I also have burning and pain during urination, a culture is in process. My doctors plan is for my next shot in 2 weeks to be a 6 month level of Eligard (if I am recalling correctly). My quesiton is are these urinary problems I'm having something that will dissipate over time or will I experience them for the duration of my ADT? My doctor wants me to start on radiation therapy in 3 months, with I believe 28 treatments over 5.5 weeks, which I'm thinking could introduce another possible cause for these same symptoms. ?

  • @LorenzoAscali-np1jv
    @LorenzoAscali-np1jv Před měsícem

    Does Breaky therapy also take care of BPH symptoms?

  • @michaeldunphy3887
    @michaeldunphy3887 Před rokem +1

    I am concerned about dementia and Alzheimer's disease occurring with patients taking ADT therapy for over 12 months. There is a Meta-analysis available in the medical literature that shows a relationship. Can Dr Scholz address my concerns in a future presentation? Thanks

  • @joeturner1195
    @joeturner1195 Před 9 měsíci

    Have tumor 6/6 ,1.6 mm and PSA 4.5 have heard that there is radiation pellets that can be used what are your thoughts of this thanks

  • @CharlesHarkerSanJose
    @CharlesHarkerSanJose Před rokem

    Regarding recurrence with focal therapy after tulsa, laser, cryo, hifu etc. it's said a 2nd treatment is possible. But what about focal radiation? Is a 2nd treatment possible? (Since full gland radiation isnt rec'd a 2nd time.)

  • @sylviagall5523
    @sylviagall5523 Před rokem +2

    My husband has a Gleason score of3+4 with a psa of 6.374 what can be done

    • @wormsnake1
      @wormsnake1 Před 7 měsíci +1

      What did your husband decide to do in the end?x

  • @mikimoto99
    @mikimoto99 Před 9 měsíci +2

    Brachytherapy only way to go if you can afford it👍🏻

  • @alanaldpal950
    @alanaldpal950 Před 11 měsíci +1

    They “ buy instruments and start practicing on patients”. ….. great who wants to go first.