What You Need to Know about
Cancer of the Prostate
The Prostate
The prostate is a male sex gland. It produces
a thick fluid that forms part of the semen.
The prostate is about the size of a walnut. It is located below the bladder
and in front of the rectum. The
prostate surrounds the upper part of the urethra,
the tube that empties urine from the bladder.
The prostate needs male hormones
to function. The main male hormone is testosterone,
which is made mainly by the testicles.
Some male hormones are produced in small amounts by the adrenal
glands.

What Is Cancer?
Cancer
is a group of many different diseases that have some important
things in common. They all affect cells, the body's basic unit
of life. To understand cancer, it is helpful to know about
normal cells and what happens when cells become cancerous.
The body is made up of many types
of cells. Normally, cells grow and divide to produce more cells
only when the body needs them. This orderly process helps keep
the body healthy.
If the cells keep dividing when
new cells are not needed, they form too much tissue. Excess
tissue can form a mass, called a tumor.
Excess tissue can be benign
or malignant.
- Benign tissue is not
cancer. The cells do not invade nearby tissue or spread to
other parts of the body.
- Malignant tissue is
cancer. The cancer cells divide out of control. They can
invade and destroy nearby healthy tissue. Also, cancer cells
can break away from the tumor they form and enter the
bloodstream and lymphatic
system, This is how cancer spreads from the original
(primary) tumor to form new tumors in other parts of the
body. The spread of cancer is called metastasis.
Benign
prostatic hyperplasia (BPH) is the abnormal growth of
benign prostate cells. In BPH, the prostate grows larger and
pushes against the urethra and bladder, blocking the normal flow
of urine. More than half of the men in the United States between
the ages of 60 and 70 and as many as 90 percent between the ages
of 70 and 90 have symptoms of BPH. Although this condition is
seldom a threat to life, it may require treatment to relieve
symptoms.
Most cancers are named for the
type of cell or organ in which they begin. Cancer that begins in
the prostate is called primary prostate cancer (or prostatic
cancer). Prostate cancer may remain in the prostate gland, or it
may spread to nearby lymph
nodes. Prostate cancer may also spread to the bones,
bladder, rectum, and other organs.
When cancer spreads to other
parts of the body, the new tumor has the same malignant cells
and the same name as the primary tumor. For example, if prostate
cancer spreads to the bones, the cancer cells in the new tumor
are prostate cancer cells. The disease is metastatic prostate
cancer; it is not bone cancer.
Symptoms
Early prostate cancer often does
not cause symptoms. When symptoms of prostate cancer do occur,
they may include some of the following problems:
- A need to urinate frequently,
especially at night;
- Difficulty starting urination
or holding back urine;
- Inability to urinate;
- Weak or interrupted flow of
urine;
- Painful or burning urination;
- Painful ejaculation;
- Blood in urine or semen;
and/or
- Frequent pain or stiffness in
the lower back, hips, or upper thighs.
Any of these symptoms may be
caused by cancer or by other, less serious health problems, such
as BPH or an infection. Only a doctor can tell the cause. A man
who has symptoms like these should see his family doctor or a urologist
(a doctor who specializes in treating diseases of the genitourinary
system). Do not wait to feel pain; early prostate cancer
does not cause pain.
Diagnosis
If symptoms occur, the doctor
asks about the patient's medical history, performs a physical
exam, and may order laboratory tests. The exams and tests may
include the following:
- Digital
rectal exam--the doctor inserts a gloved,
lubricated finger into the rectum and feels the prostate
through the rectal wall to check for hard or lumpy areas.
- Blood tests--a lab
measures the levels of prostate-specific
antigen (PSA) and prostatic
acid phosphatase (PAP) in the blood. The level of
PSA in the blood may rise in men who have prostate cancer,
BPH, or an infection in the prostate. The level of PAP rises
above normal in many prostate cancer patients, especially if
the cancer has spread beyond the prostate. The doctor cannot
diagnose prostate cancer with these tests alone because
elevated PSA or PAP levels may also indicate other,
noncancerous problems. However, the doctor will take the
results of these tests into account in deciding whether to
check the patient further for signs of cancer.
- Urine test--a lab
checks the urine for blood or infection.
The doctor may order other tests
to learn more about the cause of the symptoms and to help
determine whether conditions of the prostate are benign or
malignant, such as:
- Transrectal ultrasonography--sound
waves that cannot be heard by humans (ultrasound) are sent
out by a probe inserted into the rectum. The waves bounce
off the prostate, and a computer uses the echoes to create a
picture called a sonogram.
- Intravenous
pyelogram--a series of x-rays of the organs of
the urinary tract.
- Cystoscopy
--a procedure in which a doctor looks into the urethra and
bladder through a thin, lighted tube.
If test results suggest that
cancer may be present, the patient will need to have a biopsy.
A biopsy is the only sure way to know whether a problem is
cancer. During a biopsy, the doctor removes a small amount of
prostate tissue, usually with a needle. A pathologist
looks at the tissue under a microscope to check for cancer
cells. If cancer is present, the pathologist usually reports the
grade of the tumor. The
grade tells how closely the tumor resembles normal prostate
tissue and suggests how fast the tumor is likely to grow. One
way of grading prostate cancer, called the Gleason system, uses
scores of 2 to 10. Another system uses G1 through G4. Tumors
with lower scores are less likely to grow or spread than tumors
with higher scores.
A man who needs a biopsy may want
to ask the doctor some of the following questions:
- How long will the procedure
take? Will I be awake? Will it hurt?
- How soon will I know the
results?
- If I do have cancer, who will
talk to me about treatment? When?
If the physical exam and test
results do not suggest cancer, the doctor may recommend medicine
to reduce the symptoms caused by an enlarged prostate. Surgery
is another way to relieve these symptoms. The surgery used in
such cases is transurethral
resection of the prostate (TURP or TUR). In TURP, an
instrument is inserted through the penis to remove prostate
tissue that is pressing against the upper part of the urethra.
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