Prostate Cancer Flashcards
What is the Epidemiology of Prostate Cancer, what are the common risk factors?
- COMMON
- 2nd most common cause of male cancer deaths
Risk Factors
- Age (BIGGEST ONE)
- Afro-Caribbean
- Family history (e.g. BRCA 2 gene, breast cancer + prostate cancer are associated, Chr 1 implicated)
- Dietary factors (high fat, meat/ alcohol consumption high)
- Occupational exposure to cadmium
What are the Clinical features of Prostate Cancer, how does it differ in a metastatic spread?
Often ASYMPTOMATIC
Lower Urinary Tract Obstruction
- Hesitancy
- Poor stream
- Terminal dribbling
- Nocturia
- pain when urinating
Metastatic Spread
- Bone pain
- Cord compression
- Systemic symptoms: malaise, anorexia, weight loss
- Paraneoplastic syndromes (e.g. hypercalcaemia)
What are the methods for diagnosis Prostate Cacner?
PSA
- NOTE: not a very specific test for prostate cancer – can also be raised if benign or with prostatitis/ UTIs [older patients are more likely to pick up UTIs]/ cycling/ trauma e.g. catherisation or surgery. PSA level increases with age so might have different normal for different ages
CT/MRI Scan
- Assesses extent of local invasion and lymph node involvement
Transrectal Ultrasound and Needle Biopsy
- Gleason score:
- Low risk: 3+3
- High risk: 5+5
What are the possible treatments of Prostate Cancer?
Watchful waiting
- Older people
- Low grade tumours
Radical protatectomy
- Confined to prostate gland
- SE: incontinence & impotence
- PSA levels <10-12ng/ml and age <70 years, giving the group with the highest chance for survival
External beam radiotherapy/ radioactive “seeds”
- tumour has spread outside of the prostate capsule but has not affected other organs
- SE: incontinence & impotence
Met needs hormone therapy (maybe in combo with one of the prevoptions) + chemical bilateral orchidectomy to remove main source of testosterone (LHRH agonist)
HOW IT WORKS? Over-stimulates the pituitary receptor, causing them to become desensitized such that they no longer response to LHRH so LH and testosterone production stopped
Weak androgens produced by adrenal glands 🡪 anti-androgens are used
bind to the androgen receptor to prevent its activation by androgens, and may also actively repress androgen target genes
SE: osteoporosis, loss of libido, anaemia, muscle atrophy, memory loss and gynaecomastia