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Life after Prostate Cancer and its treatment Mr Sanjeev Pathak Consultant Urological Surgeon and Cancer Lead Doncaster and Bassetlaw NHS Trust 12 th March.

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Presentation on theme: "Life after Prostate Cancer and its treatment Mr Sanjeev Pathak Consultant Urological Surgeon and Cancer Lead Doncaster and Bassetlaw NHS Trust 12 th March."— Presentation transcript:

1 Life after Prostate Cancer and its treatment Mr Sanjeev Pathak Consultant Urological Surgeon and Cancer Lead Doncaster and Bassetlaw NHS Trust 12 th March 2014

2 Objectives Epidemiology Prostate cancer treatment and complications Support and life after cancer Primary care follow-up

3 Epidemiology – Prostate Cancer Aging population Increased awareness of Prostate Cancer (media, friends, family…..) Increased PSA testing Increase in survival following treatment of prostate cancer Implications on resources in primary and secondary care.

4 TNM Staging for Prostate Cancer

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8 Treatment of Prostate Cancer 1. Organ-confined prostate cancer (curative intent) 2. Locally, advanced prostate cancer (possible cure) 3. Metastatic prostate cancer (non-curative)

9 Organ-confined prostate cancer Radical Prostatectomy (Open / Robotic) –Erectile Dysfunction Impotence Ejaculation Penile length –Urinary Incontinence

10 Organ-confined prostate cancer Radical Radiotherapy –Erectile Dysfunction Impotence Ejaculation –Bowel and Bladder Symptoms. –Long-term risk of Bowel Cancer.

11 Organ-confined prostate cancer HIFU / Brachytherapy (significantly less side-effects)

12 Androgen Deprivation Therapy (ADT) + Radical Radiotherapy Locally, advanced prostate cancer

13 ADT (Zoladex / Prostap) Short-term side effects Lethargy Mood changes Hot flushes Sexual desire etc…

14 ADT (Zoladex / Prostap) Short-term side effects Lethargy Mood changes Hot flushes Sexual desire etc… Long-term side effects Metabolic Syndrome (Testosterone) Osteoporosis / fracture Psychological issues Relationships ?

15 Metastatic Prostate Cancer 1.ADT 2.Bicalutamide 3.Dexamethasone (Steroids) 4.Chemotherapy 5.Palliative therapy

16 Life after treatment Cured patients Non-curative patients

17 Support for men with prostate cancer Cancer Nurse Specialist Secondary CarePrimary Care

18 Erectile Dysfunction Counselling Cialis / Viagra (penile rehabilitation) Intracavernosal /urethral therapy Vacuum devices

19 Urinary incontinence Counselling Pre-operative pelvic floor exercises Post-operative pelvic floor exercises Urinary incontinence pads Artificial Urinary Sphincter

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21 ADT Hot Flushes Lethargy Osteoporosis Metabolic syndrome

22 Diet Cooked Tomatoes (Lycopene) Green Tea Soy Products Pumpkin seeds Reduce red meat

23 Life-style changes Exercise Yoga Prostate cancer support groups

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25 NICE guidelines for prostate cancer (2008, and 2014) “After, at least 2 years, men with a stable PSA and who have had no significant treatment complications should be offered follow up outside the hospital (primary care) by telephone or secure electronic communications, unless they are taking part in a clinical trial that requires more formal clinic based follow up. Direct access to the urological cancer MDT should be offered and explained. ”

26 CCG - GP challenge 6/12 reviews on a growing number of men PSA ADT administration Do GP practices have adequate recall systems ? Patient choice : prefer community ? Chesterfield audit – 93% preferred specialist team follow up Do GP’s want the responsibility of follow up ? Additional support – LES payment ?

27 Discharge to Community care Clinical summary from the discharging consultant with local contact details. Expectation that community care will perform 6/12 review with symptom assessment and PSA estimation. (DRE not required) Rising PSA Deteriorating symptoms Urgent New Patient Referral to local MDT

28 Treated – localised disease. Men treated with curative intent – “classical survivor” Radical surgery. Stable disease at 2 years post treatment, with controlled continence and potency. PSA < 0.1 Radical radiotherapy. Stable disease at 2 years post treatment, with controlled therapy side effects can be discharged to community care follow up. 6/12 years of ADT treatment typical. Brachytherapy. Likely discharge at 3 yrs. Details awaited from Leeds

29 Locally, advanced disease Radical surgery. Stable disease at 2 years maybe discharged to community care at discretion of urological surgeon. Higher risk of recurrence. Radical radiotherapy. Stable disease at 3 years post treatment (ADT) maybe discharged to community care at the discretion of the oncologist Watchful wait. Where a joint decision to start ADT at a later time with symptoms or rising PSA; appropriate for community care for 6/12 PSA and referral back at PSA 40, or symptoms. Androgen deprivation therapy. Stable disease with PSA responsive to ADT.

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