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PSA After Prostatectomy |
Prostate specific antigen, or PSA, is a glycoprotein produced by the epithelial cells in the glands and ducts of the normal prostate gland as well as by prostate cancer cells. Therefore, serum PSA is prostate-specific, not prostate cancer-specific. The fact that your father had a radical prostatectomy means that his PSA should register as zero or undetectable (most labs will state that the PSA level is somewhere below the detectable range, usually less than 0.2 ng/mL), since the surgery should have removed all of the prostate gland along with the cancer. Serum PSA can be elevated for a number of reasons: benign prostatic hypertrophy (BPH), prostate infection, prostatic manipulation or biopsy, and prostate cancer. In your father's case, PSA elevation could only be due to residual cancer, since there is no longer a prostate there to be enlarged, infected, or manipulated. Most PSA elevations after radical prostatectomy can be treated with local radiation therapy to the prostate bed (the surgical area from which the prostate was removed) with varying degrees of success. Some advocate the use of anti-androgen therapy (hormonal therapy - Zoladex, Lupron, Casodex, Flutamide, etc.) along with, after, or instead of radiation therapy, all depending on the specific circumstances of the case. The fact that his PSA remains elevated after radiation therapy is of significant concern. It is highly suggestive of residual cancer in the prostate bed, lymph nodes, or bones. While bone scans are helpful in localizing metastatic disease (spread of cancer) in the bones, they do not always detect disease. No radiographic study is 100% sensitive and accurate. Your father may have disease that is too small to detect on bone scan. One important issue is whether your father has any new bone pain, which could be a sign of disease spread. One issue you should discuss with your father's urologist is whether your father needs hormonal therapy at this time. |
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