FrançaisMovember

Local Therapies

Movember
For more information visit
www.movember.com

In The News

PSA Fitness (Power, Strength & Agility)
HALIFAX, N.S., January 16, 2012/CNW/ Prostate Cancer Canada Atlantic is proud to announce the launch of PSA Fitness (Power, Strength & Agility), a free nine week exercise program for men who have been diagnosed with prostate cancer.  PSA Fitness, resistance training and yoga, is an important patient-centered therapy for prostate cancer survivors in Halifax.

TELUS donation to support Prostate Cancer Canada
Toronto, ON- January 13, 2012- On January 10th, Prostate Cancer Canada received a generous donation of $100,000 from TELUS at the launch of the TIEd Together exhibition. TELUS’ donation was made possible through the Canadian Football League Grey Cup cause marketing campaign. The donation will support Prostate Cancer Canada’s ongoing efforts to eliminate the disease through research, education, support and awareness.

Click For Information Archive
Print this page.  Bookmark this page. Decrease font size.Increase font size.


Radiation Therapy

Radiation therapy uses high-energy X-rays, either beamed from a machine (external beam irradiation) or released by radioactive seeds implanted in the prostate (brachytherapy), to kill cancer cells.

Radiation can be used:

  • instead of surgery for men with localized prostate cancer
  • for men whose tumours have spread in the pelvis but not in the lymph nodes
  • to shrink tumours and provide pain relief in advanced prostate cancer

External Beam Irradiation
The location of the prostate is determined prior to treatment, and the skin is marked with ink to guide the radiation to the right area. Electromagnetic radiation is given to the prostate in the same way an X-Ray is done. Treatment is given five times each week (Monday through Friday) for seven to eight weeks. Each session lasts about 15 minutes and the treatment itself is painless.

Side Effects
Most side effects involve the rectum and bladder. They may include diarrhea, rectal bleeding, urinary frequency, incontinence and bleeding from the bladder. Side effects are usually mild and disappear after treatment has stopped. External beam irradiation can also cause tiredness, that may not improve until one or two months after treatment is completed.

Twenty five to 50 per cent of men lose their ability to obtain an erection within one to two years following treatment. (Impotence does not usually begin right after treatment). It is believed that over time the radiation takes a gradual toll on the nerves and blood vessels that control erection.

Cure and Recurrence Rates
Long-term results are dependent on the stage and grade of the tumour at the time of diagnosis. In general, the odds of being alive 10 years after radiation treatment are around 70 per cent and there is a 40 per cent chance the cancer will return. In favourable cases, however, the odds are significantly better.

Radiation therapy success rates seem comparable to those for surgery in men whose life expectancy is seven to 10 years. There is considerable debate, however, about its effectiveness (compared with surgery) in men with longer life expectancies.

Brachytherapy
Brachytherapy is a form of internal radiation. Radioactive material in the form of small “seeds” are placed directly in the cancerous tissue during a procedure that takes one to two hours, under local anesthesia. Patients usually go home the same day. The seeds, each about the size of a grain of rice, release radiation for up to six months, and then remain permanently and harmlessly in place.

The advantage of brachytherapy is that it targets the cancerous areas of the prostate and it has less of an impact on healthy cells in areas like the rectum and bladder.

Brachytherapy is a relatively new treatment and long-term effects are not yet known. However, at five years more than 90 per cent of men who undergo this procedure remain disease-free.

Brachytherapy is not suitable for all patients. It is a good treatment for men in the early stages of prostate cancer (generally, Gleason grade of 6 or less and PSA less than 10) and small prostates (volume less than 50 cubic centimeters). Men with larger prostates (50 to 70 cc's) can take hormone therapy to reduce the size of their prostates and then try brachytherapy.

Gleason Scoring

Side Effects
Side effects usually disappear in four to six weeks. Common problems include incontinence, burning with urination, blockage of urinary flow and soreness in the area of the implant. Sexual impotence occurs in about 15 per cent of men under the age of 70 and 30 to 35 per cent of men over 70.

Pour trouver un groupe de soutien au Québec, visitez: http://t.co/gmMxYY4e
Follow Us On Twitter
Prostate Cancer Canada
2 Lombard Street, 3rd Floor, Toronto
Ontario M5C 1M1, Canada
info@prostatecancer.ca

Telephone: 416-441-2131
Toll-free: 1-888-255-0333
Fax: 416-441-2325
© 2011 - Prostate Cancer Canada - Charitable Registration Number: BN 89127 0944 RR0001
Design and Development Inorbital