It's true to say that most men
die with prostate cancer rather than from it. It's now the
most prevalent cancer in men, having overtaken lung cancer,
but it's also one of the most benign.
Sadly the same cannot be said
for the remedy. Radical interventions such as surgery and
radiotherapy can cause permanent incontinence and impotence
in around a quarter of all patients.
Doctors never seem to get around
to telling the patient about these risks, nor do they put
forward gentler approaches that may at least make life worth
living.
The other essential part of the
treatment choice should be determined by the age of the
patient. Not only is prostate cancer a relatively benign
cancer, it also tends to be a slow-acting one as well. So
the treatment may be different for a man in his fifties
compared with one in his seventies. In the latter case,
a 'watchful waiting' approach is by far the kindest.
While all of this is very familiar
to regular subscribers of What Doctors Don't Tell You newsletter
(the print version), it's something that is finally being
taken up by the Institute for Cancer Research in the UK.
They've finally put their collectiv e heads above the parapet
and pronounced that the treatment may be worse than the
disease.
They point the finger at the
standard PSA test for detecting prostate cancer, which E-news
readers will know is not the most reliable of tests. But,
worse still, it cannot detect aggressive cancers from the
slower-acting ones, which the Institute helpfully dubs in
user-friendly speak 'tigers' and 'pussycats'.
The Institute reckons that up
to half of all men diagnosed with prostate cancer do not
need any treatment at all. As Chris Parker at the Royal
Marsden Hospital succinctly put it: "Prostate cancer
is the only human cancer that is curable but which commonly
does not need to be cured."
* To find out more about
prostate cancer-and every other type of cancer-and the treatments,
both conventional and alternative, read the WDDTY Cancer
Handbook. To order your copy, click
on this link