BLOGGERS: MARK SCHOLZ, MD & RALPH H. BLUM

The co-authors of Invasion of the Prostate Snatchers, blog alternate posts weekly. We invite you to post your comments.
Showing posts with label indigo. Show all posts
Showing posts with label indigo. Show all posts

Tuesday, July 15, 2014

INDIGO: Relapsed Prostate Cancer

MARK SCHOLZ, MD

Those dreaded words, “relapsed cancer,” shake you to the core. They mean that surgery or radiation has failed to “get it all.”  However, while with most cancers “relapse” is a fatal pronouncement.  However, prostate cancer has its own distinct reality. Most men who relapse don’t die from the disease.  The outlook is good because relapses are usually detected by a rising PSA when the cancer is still microscopic. Visible, scan-detected metastases may not appear for ten or more years after the PSA relapse occurs.

Multiple Treatment Options for a Rising PSA
The list of potential treatment options for INDIGO is extensive: observation, radiation, hormone therapy with Lupron and Casodex, salvage seed implant, salvage cryotherapy, Zytiga, Xtandi and Taxotere. However, combinations of these treatments are most commonly employed. Some of these combinations are listed below in order of increasing treatment intensity:  

1.     Observation
2.     Mild hormone therapy consisting of continuous or intermittent Casodex
3.     Monotherapy with fossa radiation, seed implant or cryotherapy for persistent local disease
4.     Combination hormone therapy with Lupron and Casodex given intermittently
5.     Same as #4 but with the addition of pelvic radiation and 4 months of hormone therapy
6.     Same as #5 but with hormone therapy extended for 18 months
7.     Same as #6 but with the addition of Taxotere or Zytiga or Xtandi
Defining Different Types of Relapses
Just as PSA, cancer grade, scan findings and stage were instrumental for assigning a SHADE in newly-diagnosed men; SHADES are important for putting a relapsed in perspective. Ultimately, how to treat INDIGO is guided by a combination of four factors— the SHADE before treatment, the PSA doubling time, individual patient factors such as age, sexual functionality and urinary control, and last, but not least, the cancer location.

The Original Shade before Treatment
In general, treatment should be more aggressive (combined therapy with Lupron and pelvic lymph node radiation) if the original SHADE was unfavorable (AZURE for example).  Treatment should lean toward a less aggressive approach—cryotherapy alone, seed implant alone or Casodex alone—if the original SHADE was SKY.

The PSA Doubling Time
Treatment is heavily influenced by the rate of PSA rise. For example, if the PSA is doubling in less than six months, aggressive combination treatment with Lupron and Casodex plus radiation (or cryosurgery in men previously treated with radiation) is probably required.  If the PSA doubling rate is between six and twelve months, a less aggressive treatment approach with radiation alone, cryosurgery alone or intermittent Lupron and Casodex is reasonable.  When more than a year is required for the PSA to double, observation without immediate treatment may be considered.

Patient Factors that Affect Treatment Selection
A patient’s age needs to be factored into the treatment decision-making process. Men who are more elderly can “step down” the intensity of their treatment by temporizing with milder hormone therapy such as Casodex with Avodart. Younger men, who, prior to relapse, were in the High-Risk (AZURE) category may want to consider upgrading the intensity of treatment by using prophylactic pelvic lymph node radiation plus a more intensive hormone therapy such as Zytiga or Xtandi and/or chemotherapy with Taxotere.

Searching for the Location of the Cancer
Men with rising PSA should undergo standard imaging studies (listed below) in an attempt to determine the location of the cancer. Unfortunately, these scans are often unable detect recurrent cancer unless the PSA is over 20. However, improved PET scans that utilize C11 choline or acetate have the potential to detect recurrent disease with much lower PSA levels. Unfortunately, the PET scans are so new that insurance coverage is often limited.

Sometime even the best scans can’t detect where the cancer is. When this occurs after surgery, particularly when the PSA doubling time is slow, residual cancer in prostate fossa is often suspected and radiation to the prostate fosse is often administered. Cure rates are better when radiation is initiated at a lower level of PSA. 

Standard Imaging Studies for INDIGO
  • Color Doppler Ultrasound or Multiparametric 3 Tesla MRI can be used to look for residual cancer in the surgical fossa or in the prostate gland in men previously treated with radiation. 
  • Pelvic MRI or CT scans are used to check for spread to pelvic lymph nodes. (Carbon 11 acetate PET scan, however, is far more accurate than CT or MRI but some centers still consider them investigational/experimental)
  • Technetium bone scans are standard. New F18 PET bone scans, however, are preferable because they can detect much smaller cancers than technetium bone scans.
Apparent Locally Recurrent Disease
Scans done in a man with a rising PSA after radiation that indicate a recurrence localized inside the prostate, may be curable with cryosurgery alone or possibly with a seed implant alone.  Similarly, an isolated local relapse in the prostate fossa after surgery may be curable with radiation alone. Even though scans show no metastases outside the prostate or the fossa, microscopic metastases in the pelvic nodes may be present, especially in men who have fast PSA doubling times or whose SHADE was originally AZURE.  In these higher risk situations, the addition of prophylactic pelvic lymph node radiation with intensity modulated radiation (IMRT) combined with hormone therapy may be advisable.
Regional Spread to Lymph Nodes
When cancerous nodes are detected in the pelvis, the idea of doing node-directed IMRT is even more compelling. Since overt cancer in the lymph nodes is an indication of potentially life threatening disease, an extended course of hormone therapy, possibly with the addition of second generation hormones such as Zytiga or Xtandi, can be contemplated. Taxotere chemotherapy is an additional consideration.
Hormone Therapy Alone
When the location of the relapse is unclear, or if the risks of side effects from radiation appear too high, relapsed disease can be effectively suppressed for many years with hormone therapy alone. The side effects of hormone therapy tend to increase with longer use so intermittent therapy is very popular. A typical intermittent protocol is to begin with an initial course of treatment for six to twelve month followed by treatment holiday. After hormone therapy is stopped, testosterone starts to recover and the PSA begins to rise. Treatment is restarted when the PSA rises back to the original PSA baseline, or up to five, whichever is lower.
Putting It All Together
Treatment selection for INDIGO can be complex. Constructing a cancer “profile” using the original SHADE, the PSA doubling time, and scan finding, is the first step. Unfortunately, the location of the recurrent cancer may remain uncertain, even after doing the best scans.  When this is the case the extent of disease may require a professional “guesstimate” based on the PSA doubling time and the original SHADE.  Despite all these difficulties and uncertainties, the good news is that a wide variety of treatment options are available and treatment is usually very effective. For the majority of men the disease can be controlled on a long-term basis, and some cases it can even cured. 
CALENDAR ALERT TO THOSE WHO LIVE AROUND LONG BEACH, CA Learn more about prostate cancer treatments as Mark Scholz, MD, discusses treating PSA relapsed disease at UsTOO Long Beach Prostate Cancer Support Group July 22, 2014 - 6:30 PM to 8:30 PM, at Long Beach Memorial Medical Center. For more information follow this link: http://goo.gl/HMojNV
 

Tuesday, November 5, 2013

The INDIGO Shade of Blue

BY MARK SCHOLZ, MD

Prostate cancer is a vast and complicated field. To make it more manageable, PCRI breaks it down into five separate Shades of Blue. Men with recurrent disease after surgery or radiation are in the INDIGO shade. The outlook for men with INDIGO is optimistic.  Some men can still be cured. For those who can’t, the vast majority will be able to keep their disease in check with treatment.

A rising PSA confirmed on sequential measurements is the most common sign of a relapse.
Less common signs of relapse are:
a.     A positive biopsy from the prostate fossa. The “fossa” is where the prostate gland used to be prior to surgery (also, a nodule may or may not be felt on digital rectal examination)

b.    Persistent prostate cancer detected in the gland after radiation by needle biopsy, or by scans or by digital rectal examination

c.     Prostate cancer that has been detected in the pelvic lymph nodes by a scan.
 
People need to be aware that a PSA elevation after surgery or radiation can occur for noncancerous reasons, including incomplete removal of the prostate gland after surgery, prostate tissue “left behind” in the fossa, results in low but persistent levels of detectable PSA.

After radiation, the prostate gland remains in place. Therefore, in men who have been recently treated with radiation combined with testosterone inactivating pharmaceuticals (TIP), discontinuing TIP will lead to testosterone recovery which causes PSA levels to rise. Also, radiation-induced inflammatory reactions can occur in residual prostate gland cause a PSA rise. This rather common phenomenon is called the “PSA Bump.”  It’s essential to be aware of the noncancerous causes of PSA elevation so that well-intentioned but unnecessary treatment can be avoided.  

INDIGO men will require imaging studies to determine the extent of the disease.
1.     Color Doppler or MRI is used to look for residual cancer located in the surgical fossa or in the prostate gland in men previously treated with radiation. 

2.     Pelvic MRI or CT scans are used to look for spread to pelvic lymph nodes. (Carbon 11 acetate PET scan is more accurate than CT or MRI but is still considered to be under investigation)

3.     CT or MRI of the abdomen and bone scans are used to detect the presence of more distant spread to lymph nodes outside the pelvis or to the bones. Scan-detected disease outside the pelvis or in the bones changes the shade to ROYAL. 
Treatment for INDIGO
Treatment options include observation, radiation, TIP, cryotherapy, or combinations of TIP with radiation or cryotherapy. Treatment selection is guided by four factors—the cancer location, the original Shade, the PSA doubling time and a patient’s age. By incorporating all four factors into the treatment selection process, the risk over-treating, i.e., incurring unnecessary side effects from treatment, is reduced.  Awareness of all four of the factors also helps to avoid another common mistake—under-treating—which reduces the likelihood of achieving durable remission.
An isolated “local” relapse is one that appears to be localized inside the prostate after radiation. Local relapse may be curable with cryosurgery alone.  An isolated “local” relapse in the prostate fossa after surgery may be curable with radiation alone.
When no local disease can be detected and when all the scans are clear—termed a “pure” PSA relapse—treatment selection will be influenced primarily by the rate of PSA rise. For example, if the PSA is doubling in less than six months, aggressive combination treatment with TIP plus radiation or TIP plus cryosurgery may be best.  If the PSA doubling rates is between six and twelve months, a less aggressive treatment approach with radiation alone, cryosurgery alone or intermittent TIP alone, is reasonable.  When the doubling time is greater than 12 months, observation without immediate treatment may be considered.
A patient’s age and the original shade at the time of diagnosis also need to be factored into the treatment decision-making process. Men who are more elderly can “step down” the intensity of their treatment plan by temporizing with mild forms of TIP, such as low-dose Casodex. Younger men, who prior to relapse, were in the High-Risk (AZURE) category may want to consider prophylactic pelvic lymph node radiation, a more intensive type of TIP with Zytiga or Xtandi or even chemotherapy with Taxotere.    
Side Effects of Treatment—INDIGO

The residual prostate gland after radiation is anatomically close to the rectum, urinary bladder, and the nerves that control erections. Therefore treatment with salvage radiation or cryotherapy increases the risk of additional long-term sexual, urinary or rectal dysfunction beyond what has already caused by the original surgery or radiation.
Men who are already struggling with incontinence problems from previous surgery may experience further decline in their urinary control when they undergo radiation directed at the fossa. Men who have cryosurgery for a relapse after radiation almost always become impotent. Incontinence can also occur. Surgery to remove a previously radiated prostate causes very high rates of impotence and incontinence.
Radiation to the pelvic lymph nodes can cause damage to the surrounding intestines with symptoms of cramping, diarrhea or loss of rectal control. Since the advent of intensity modulated radiation (IMRT), however, bowel damage from pelvic radiation is a much less common event.
TIP is a common component of the treatment plan for men in the INDIGO category. The severity of side effects from TIP increases when it is continued for a longer duration. As a result, intermittent TIP is very popular. The intermittent TIP protocol is to continue treatment for six to twelve month after which TIP is stopped and a treatment “holiday” is ensues—assuming the PSA drops below the 0.1/ng threshold. The next cycle of TIP is resumed when the PSA rises back to the original PSA baseline, or up to five, whichever is lower.
The most troublesome side effects from TIP are weight gain and fatigue. Maintaining a careful diet and doing regular exercise is very helpful in offsetting these problems. Low libido, however, only responds to a treatment holiday. Daily Cialis is necessary to reduce the risk of permanent erectile atrophy.
Other side effects of TIP typically respond well to the following medications:  Low-dose estrogen controls hot flashes. Osteoporosis can be prevented by Prolia, Boniva or Actonel. Mood swings stabilize with antidepressants. Breast growth is prevented with nipple radiation or Femara.  Erectile dysfunction can be counteracted with Viagra.
Finding the right type of treatment for men in INDIGO is achieved when the benefit of treatment is weighed carefully against the potential for treatment-related side effects. Fortunately, a wide variety of effective treatment is available for men with INDIGO and the majority will have their disease controlled on a long term basis.
So much for getting “the Blues” when you have prostate cancer!