Prostate Cancer
Overview
When everything is functioning as it should, you may not spend a lot of time thinking about your prostate, the walnut-sized gland that sits below the bladder and in front of the rectum. Found only in men, it surrounds the urethra—the tube through which both urine and semen pass—and plays an important role in the male reproductive system, producing the fluid that makes up part of semen.
But when something goes wrong with the prostate, it can cause worrying symptoms. Men may have a hard time starting the flow of urine, need to urinate more frequently than usual, and have a weak urinary stream. These and other symptoms are often caused by an enlarged prostate gland, but they can also, in rare cases, result from prostate cancer, which, after skin cancer, is the most common form of cancer in men. Prostate cancer is most often silent (without symptoms) and is detected through prostate cancer screening.
Prostate cancer most commonly occurs in men over age 65 and is rare in those under 40. The National Cancer Institute estimates that in 2021, nearly 250,000 men will be diagnosed with the disease and around 34,000 men will die from it. Around one out of every eight men will be diagnosed with it during their lifetime.
Though prostate cancer is common, the good news is that there are many treatments for it. If caught at an early stage, it has a good prognosis and, in most cases, can be cured.
What is prostate cancer?
Prostate cancer occurs when cells in the prostate gland grow and divide uncontrollably. Over time, these cells can form a mass of tissue called a tumor. In many cases, tumors are benign, meaning they are not cancerous and do not spread to other parts of the body. Sometimes, though, tumors are malignant, or cancerous. The cells that make up malignant tumors are capable of invading nearby tissues and spreading to distant parts of the body.
Prostate cancer usually grows and progresses slowly, though in some cases, it spreads aggressively and rapidly. In its early stages, when the cancer is small and has not invaded neighboring tissues or spread to other parts of the body, prostate cancer does not cause any symptoms. In advanced prostate cancer, however, symptoms may begin to develop. Cancer cells may break away from the tumor in the prostate and spread to the lymph nodes and other parts of the body. This is known as metastatic cancer. When prostate cancers metastasize, they often spread to the bones of the pelvis, ribs, or backbone where they can cause pain and other symptoms.
What are the risk factors for prostate cancer?
The strongest risk factors for prostate cancer include:
- Age (prostate cancer is rare in men under age 40 and risk goes up with increasing age)
- Family history of prostate cancer
Studies have identified other factors that increase the risk for prostate cancer. These include:
- Having certain inherited genetic mutations including BRCA1, BRCA2, CHEK2, ATM, and PALB2 among others
- Being Black or African American
- Lynch syndrome
- Exposure to certain chemicals such as Agent Orange
What are the symptoms of prostate cancer?
Early-stage prostate cancer does not cause symptoms. When symptoms develop, they may include:
- Weak urinary stream
- Increased frequency of urination (especially at night)
- Increased urge to urinate
- Difficulty starting urination
- Urinary stream that starts and stops
- Inability to completely empty bladder of urine
- Blood in the urine or semen
- Pain during urination
- Pain in the back, pelvis, or hips
- Erectile dysfunction
What screening tests are used to detect prostate cancer?
Prostate cancer screening tests are used to detect cancer at an early stage, before symptoms begin. The prostate-specific antigen (PSA) blood test—the main screening test for prostate cancer—measures the level of PSA, a protein produced by the prostate gland, in the blood. PSA levels may be elevated in men who have prostate cancer. Doctors may also perform a digital rectal exam (DRE) to examine the prostate. In this procedure, the doctor inserts a gloved finger into the patient’s rectum and feels the prostate to check for abnormalities.
If a PSA blood test or DRE detect an abnormality, the doctor will order additional tests such as a prostate magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scan and a prostate biopsy to determine if the patient has prostate cancer.
Screening may be offered to men starting around age 50 or 55, though those who are at higher risk for prostate cancer may begin screening testing at age 40 or 45. Men should talk to their doctors about the risks and benefits of screening tests.
How is prostate cancer diagnosed?
To begin diagnosis, your doctor will review your medical history, ask you about your symptoms, and whether you have any risk factors for prostate cancer. They will also perform a physical exam that usually involves a DRE.
Some additional tests are necessary for diagnosis. You may need to have a PSA blood test, even if you’ve had one within the past few weeks. Your doctor may also order one or more imaging tests such as an MRI of the prostate. A biopsy, however, is necessary to definitively diagnose prostate cancer. One common method for performing a prostate biopsy is known as transrectal biopsy. In this procedure, a doctor will use MRI- or ultrasound-imaging to guide a thin needle to the prostate through the rectum. Using the needle, they will collect small pieces of prostate tissue. A pathologist then analyzes the tissue sample under a microscope to check for the presence of cancer cells.
How is prostate cancer graded and staged?
If a doctor diagnoses prostate cancer, they will grade and stage the cancer. Grading and staging are done to determine the extent of the cancer, make a prognosis, and determine the best course of treatment.
- Grading. A pathologist will give the cancer a grade based on how abnormal the cancer cells look under a microscope. A cancer’s grade is used to predict how aggressively it is likely to spread. The lower the grade, the less likely the cancer is to spread aggressively.
- Stage. Doctors stage prostate cancer based on its grade, PSA test results, and additional imaging tests such as bone scan, computed tomography (CT) scan, or positron emission tomography (PET) scan. These imaging tests may involve the use of a small dose of radioactive material called a radiotracer to improve detection of cancer if it has spread to the bones or elsewhere in the body. A lymph node biopsy may also be necessary. Doctors assign the cancer to a stage, usually numbered between I and IV. The lower the stage, the less extensive the cancer is and the better the prognosis.
How is prostate cancer treated?
Treatments for prostate cancer include:
- Active surveillance. Rather than provide immediate treatment, the cancer is monitored over time. This approach may be used for small, slow growing cancers, especially in older men. It requires regular checkups with a doctor for PSA, DREs, imaging, and often prostate biopsies.
- Surgery. A prostatectomy, or the surgical removal of the prostate gland, may be an option for cancer that is localized to the prostate. This procedure is called a radical prostatectomy and is often done using a surgical robot. Robotic-assisted surgery is a minimally invasive approach to removing the prostate that completes the surgery through several small incisions. Surgical removal of the lymph nodes may also be necessary to determine if cancer has spread to them.
- Radiation therapy. This treatment kills and damages cancer cells by exposing them to radiation. The radiation may be given via a machine located outside the body. This is known as external beam radiation therapy (EBRT). A similar technique called stereotactic body radiation therapy (SBRT) precisely delivers high doses of radiation to the prostate. Radiation can also be given using brachytherapy, a technique in which small radioactive “seeds” are implanted in the prostate.
- Ablation therapies. Ablation therapies use energy to destroy the prostate cancer cells. This type of treatment can be used to treat the entire prostate, or, in certain cases, only where the cancer is located. Usually, a doctor inserts needles into the prostate and then uses heat, cold, or electricity to destroy the prostate cancer cells. Types of ablation include: cryoablation, high intensity focused ultrasound (HIFU), irreversible electroporation (IRE), focal laser ablation (FLA), trans urethral ultrasound ablation (TULSA), and others.
- Hormone therapy. Prostate cancer cells use hormones, called androgens, to grow. A type of hormone therapy called androgen deprivation therapy (ADT) is used to reduce androgen levels or block them from working, thereby slowing or stopping the growth of cancer cells. This may be accomplished with drugs, other hormones, and/or by the surgical removal of the testicles (which produce androgens).
- Chemotherapy. Chemotherapy uses drugs to destroy and damage cancer cells.
- Targeted therapy. This treatment uses drugs designed to target specific components of cancer cells that are not found in healthy cells.
- Pluvicto® (lutetium Lu 177 vipivotide tetraxaten). This drug is used to treat an advanced prostate cancer called prostate-specific membrane antigen-positive metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer, or PSMA-positive mCRPC. Pluvicto targets PSMA, a protein found in abundance on the surface of prostate cancer cells. It delivers radiation therapy directly to cancer cells with PSMA on their surfaces, damaging and killing them.
What is the outlook for people who have prostate cancer?
The outlook for a man with prostate cancer varies based on a number of factors including the stage and grade of the cancer, how well it responds to treatments, and the man’s age and overall health. The prognosis is good for cancer that is confined to the prostate or has spread only to nearby tissues. At these stages of prostate cancer, the five-year survival rate is 100%, and in many cases, the cancer can be cured. Men with prostate cancer that has metastasized, or spread to distant parts of the body, however, have a poorer prognosis.
What makes Yale Medicine unique in its approach to prostate cancer?
“The Yale prostate cancer program is a multidisciplinary team consisting of internationally recognized specialists in Urology, Medical Oncology, Radiation Oncology, Diagnostic Radiology, and Anatomic Pathology,” says Preston Sprenkle, MD, a Yale Medicine specialist in the treatment of urologic cancers, including prostate cancer. “With the depth and breadth of providers in the group we can personalize care to an individual’s cancer and preferences, including offering access to participate in clinical trials at all levels of prostate cancer.”
Specifically, Yale was one of the first programs in the country to offer MRI-US [ultrasound] fusion prostate biopsy for a personalized and more accurate prostate biopsy, he adds.
“Yale Urology also offers expertise in prostate cancer ablation, one of the only centers in New England that can treat prostate cancer while avoiding most of the negative impacts on urinary, sexual, and bowel function resulting from surgical and radiation therapy approaches,” says Dr. Sprenkle. “When surgery or radiation are necessary, Yale has internationally recognized physicians who utilize special techniques to maximize cancer control while minimizing the side effects of treatment.”