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    <title>CancerCompass Message Board: Recurrent Prostate cancer PSA rising</title>
    <description>CancerCompass message board discussion started by Johndp on 10/24/2007</description>
    <link>http://www.cancercompass.com/message-board/message/all,17367,0.htm</link>
    <pubDate>Sat, 06 Sep 2008 00:00:00 GMT</pubDate>
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      <title>Recurrent Prostate cancer PSA rising</title>
      <description>My Father has recurrent prostate cancer, First diagnosed in 1987, Had prostate removed immediately, was a gleason score of 5. went four years and PSA begin to rise.&amp;nbsp; Started lupon shots but side affects were to much.&amp;nbsp; Had a orchiectomy done and PSA stayed below four for 10 years.&amp;nbsp; PSA began to rise again and started on hormone therapy. has been on nilutamide for two years with PSA staying below 5.&amp;nbsp; PSA started rising again six months ago.&amp;nbsp; Still taking Nilutamide but last PSA reading was 8.5.&amp;nbsp; Had a PET scan done two months ago and came back clean.&amp;nbsp; He will go have a bone density test done in November and will see the doctor a week later for another PSA reading.&amp;nbsp; I believe the Hormone therapy has played out.&amp;nbsp; Does anyone recommend a DR at MD Anderson in Houston that is familiar with this kind of Situation?&amp;nbsp; We live in San Antonio and currently go to Cancer therapy and research center in San Antonio.&amp;nbsp; I think more can be done for him if we go to MD Anderson.&amp;nbsp; Any other sugestions for my Father without going out of the country.&amp;nbsp; He has been drinking pomegranite Juice every day for two years now and is in perfect health except for the cancer and slight anemic.&amp;nbsp; He is 73 years old.&amp;nbsp; Thank you for any responses.John P&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; </description>
      <author>Johndp</author>
      <pubDate>Wed, 24 Oct 2007 00:00:00 GMT</pubDate>
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      <title>RE: Recurrent Prostate cancer PSA rising</title>
      <description>He could have local irradiation since the PET is negative and&amp;nbsp; I would have done that at the time of the first rise rather than put him on ADT for ten years.&amp;nbsp; If they want tissue there may be a role for u/s guided needle biopsies of the prostate bed to verify.&amp;nbsp; It is obviously small and or&amp;nbsp; low grade so it may not show well on PET.&amp;nbsp; Bone scan and CT scans may be more revealing.</description>
      <author>Witchdoctor</author>
      <pubDate>Fri, 26 Oct 2007 00:00:00 GMT</pubDate>
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      <title>RE: Recurrent Prostate cancer PSA rising</title>
      <description>My father has had&amp;nbsp; bone and cat scan every year for the last three years and everything has been negative.&amp;nbsp; I insisted that he have a PET scan because his prior scans were negative.&amp;nbsp; Why would his PSA still rise if there is no cancer present so far.&amp;nbsp; Do you think MD Anderson in Houston could find why his PSA is rising?John P&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;</description>
      <author>Johndp</author>
      <pubDate>Fri, 26 Oct 2007 00:00:00 GMT</pubDate>
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      <title>RE: Recurrent Prostate cancer PSA rising</title>
      <description>Sometimes the tumor is small volume or diffuse.&amp;nbsp; If he is still healthy I would do the biopsy of the prostate bed.&amp;nbsp; If not then maybe you just watch it rise and treat when it does appear or is visible.&amp;nbsp; PET may not in this case be revealing, CT has problems differentiating tumor from soft tissue/scarring.&amp;nbsp; You either treat and see what the PSA does or you wait till something shows.&amp;nbsp; On the good side is he has a low grade tumor so it may take a long time to show and won&amp;#39;t be symptomatic.&amp;nbsp; On the downside it may not be salvageable at that time.&amp;nbsp; These are hard decisions to make and are multifactoral.&amp;nbsp; Only the patient can decide to go all out or wait.</description>
      <author>Witchdoctor</author>
      <pubDate>Fri, 26 Oct 2007 00:00:00 GMT</pubDate>
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      <title>RE: Recurrent Prostate cancer PSA rising</title>
      <description>See Dr. Christopher Logothetis at MD Anderson Houston. He is an expert on prostate cancer.</description>
      <author>Orionskye</author>
      <pubDate>Tue, 30 Oct 2007 00:00:00 GMT</pubDate>
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