| PCCN Calgary: Survivor Stories
My Story - by
Marvin Crowley
In 2003 at age
63, my PSA had gone up to 5.7 from 3.9 in
2001 so off to the urologist for a biopsy. Results in Nov
2003 were positive, Gleason 3+3=6 which is not too alarming
(they say).
After some research we decided on a prostatectomy which was
booked for Feb 2004. Cryotherapy was not being funded by Alberta
Health Care at that time.
In Jan 2004 I had a heart attack! The cardiologist's fixed
me up with an angioplasty & a bunch of pills but the urologist
postponed the prostatectomy for 6 months to July 2004!
In March 2004 another heart vessel decided to shut off so
back to the cardio's for another angioplasty and 3 months
of lectures & exercises at the Cardiac Wellness Centre
at Lindsay Park. We try to follow Dr. Dean Ornish's Program
for Reversing Heart Disease (primarily less than 25 grams
of fat per day).
The bad news was that the urologist cancelled the prostatectomy,
too much trauma for someone with 2 heart attacks!
So back to the alternative treatments. My GP had a patient
who had had cryo in Ontario and was doing very well and, fortunately
by this time, Dr Donnelly was doing it in Calgary and AHC
had approved funding.
So the old CaP was culled by icing in Sep 2004 with 1 night
in hospital and very little suffering.
We are (so far) living happily ever after with PSA at 0.
The only casualty is sex life but "been there, done that"
so after 43 years of marriage it's not a big deal anymore.
Thankfully the heart has been working good for the last 2.5
years.
Marvin Crowley
Cochrane
____________________________________________________________________
Our Story - by
Don and Nell Jacques
Starting
at about age 50 ( I am 73 years young now ) I requested a
PSA Test with my annual exam. The PSA test showed counts between
2.5 and 3.5 over many years.
Then in 2001, during my annual exam, I was told that my PSA
count had gone up to 3.9
My Doctor ( at that time on Pender Island B.C where we moved
when I retired in 1992 ) suggested another test a few months
later. The next test came in at 4.3
The Doctor sent me to a Urologist in Victoria who arranged
for me to have a biopsy. The biopsy showed that I did, in
fact, have Prostate Cancer.¬¬ Not a good day.
I met with an Oncologist in Victoria , who went over the options
with me. I decided on a Radical Prostatectomy , as I was otherwise
very healthy...... and had the operation in Victoria in 2001.
The operation went very smoothly and I felt quite well after
the operation and from that time on. ( I never did feel too
excited about the catheter, but found it quite handy if I
got caught short while out on a long walk ) I was told by
the Oncologist that the cancer in the prostate came right
out to the edge of the prostate and that he took out some
extra tissue around the prostate. He was hopeful ( as were
we ) that he got it all.
Well, my PSA count for the next five years came in at 0.1
or less and to say the least, I was delighted. I was beginning
to think I had that nasty cancer beat.
Then in December 2005,during an annual exam ( we moved back
to Calgary after the operation in 2001 ), we learned that
the cancer had returned. My count came in at 2.5
I met with my Urologist and Oncologist and after considerable
discussion about the various options, I decided to go for
radiation rather than " wait and watch" which was
another option.
By the time I went for my first Radiation Treatment in January
my count was 3.3 ( still quite low in many peoples minds )
I had 36 radiation treatments.....one each week day for 7
weeks. The treatments went very well and I experienced only
a few side effects as I progressed through the treatments.
About half way through the treatments I started having some
bowel problems......having to " go " more often
than normal,.....much more often ! A nurse at the Tom Baker
Cancer asked me if I took Metamucil and I told her I had been
taking it for years.
She suggested that I put a HEAPING TEASPOON of Metamucil in
a HALF GLASS of water before retiring each night and then
continue with my normal dosage during the day. This suggestion
worked wonderfully and I, at least , didn't have any problems
at night. I had a couple days when I felt nauseated but nothing
that kept us from being out and about every day. I did not
lose a pound during radiation. ( maybe it was because we stopped
somewhere for a treat after each treatment !! ).
I was very happy with my Urologist, Oncologist and the folks
at the Tom Baker Cancer Center. I was particularly impressed
with a lovely lady on the reception desk at the Cancer Center.
I called her " Sparkle" because she had a special
talent making people smile. I also became very fond of the
wonderful ladies who got me set up for each treatment. What
a beautiful group of ladies. They had a special way of making
you feel that every thing would be OK.
My last radiation treatment was on Mar 6th 2006 and my Oncologist
explained that I would not get the results of the radiation
for 6 months.
On September 6th 2006 , I went to the office of my Oncologist
at Tom Baker Center and he gave me the results of the PSA
test I had 2 weeks earlier.
I should tell you, that for a considerable time before this
appointment, I was a very concerned man. ( I should say I
am a born worrier ). A lot of different thoughts were going
through my head.
My Oncologist explained that my PSA Test came in at 0.03 (
compared to 0.33 at the beginning of the treatments )
To say the least my wife and I were very thankful.
My next PSA Test will be in February 2007, and we hope and
pray that the news will be encouraging again.
We have much to be thankful for.
Don Jacques (and Nell)
Calgary
____________________________________________________________________
One Man's Story - by
Alex Rankin
This
whole story starts with an annual health
check-up with our family doctor in mid-December 1997. About
a week later the results indicated that in one of the blood
tests suggest that something was amiss in the prostate. A
consultation with a urologist was recommended and I concurred
immediately. Our family doctor referred me to Dr. Bryan Donnelly.
In January 1998 I had my first consultation with him at which
time he indicated that there was a likely hood of prostate
cancer based on the PSA test. A biopsy revealed a 20% incidence
in one of the tissues examined.
What
to do next? The doctor explained that there was no hurray,
that I would not die because of the "showing". Although
my PSA was 7.5 the Gleason score was 2/4 (6). My wife and
I decided right there and then I would undergo therapy of
some kin. Dr. Donnelly then mentioned he was starting a clinical
test program to test the efficacy of cryosurgery, but before
any action along this line is undertaken, a series of test
would have to be held. After these tests had been completed
I was told I was an "excellent candidate" for cryosurgery.
No
long after I was contacted by Cheryl Scott RN, the coordinator
of the program (incidentally, Cheryl was the one earlier who
appraised me of the results of the biopsy), regarding my final
decision. Prior to the the final decision I studied extensively
on all my treatment options.
I
soon received the first of three hormone injections over a
three month period. Preparations for the actual surgery got
underway in the latter part of June. I went under the "ice"
about 7:30am Friday, July 5, 1998, and some 30 hours later
my wife took me hone. Two days later I was up and about and
able to take a walk around the block. Subsequently more tests
followed including a MRI to check on any scar tissue.
Now
for the good news. Three months after surgery a PSA test revealed
a reading of 0.2 and this number has been constant for the
past eight years.
I
am a very lucky man on three counts: one, may family physician
recognized some was amiss and did something; two: the cryosurgery
was successful thanks to Dr. Donnelly and his co-workers;
and three, my wife stood by me and put up with me during trying
times.
Alex
Rankin
Calgary
____________________________________________________________________
My Journey with Prostate Cancer - by
Gil Carlson
It was
after my annual medical at age 58 I received a call from my
doctor. The digital exam showed the prostate gland was enlarged
but smooth and soft. The result of the PSA came back 7. My
doctor was concerned and sent me to an urologist, which took
about four months waiting time.
In his office a large poster displayed an elderly man standing
in front of a urinal, a young boy was standing behind him
with legs crossed. The caption was “Never line up behind
a grey haired man if you have to go real bad.” I knew
I was in the right place.
I was sent for my first biopsy not knowing what to expect,
but thinking the worst. The urologist did not take the time
to explain the procedure of the biopsy.
I arrived at the Prostate Cancer Clinic with my wife and a
“full bladder”. The thought of Cancer was on my
mind even though I told my family I was not worried.
The nurse asked me to undress down to my socks and shorts,
and put on the house- coat that is always wide open at the
back.
The ultra sound was completed and off to the bathroom to empty
my bladder. I went back into the little change room and waited
for the unexpected.
Dr. Wiseman told me they would be taking 10 samples and asked
me to lie down on the examining bed and face the wall. My
shorts were pulled down and something that felt the size of
a roto-rooter got my attention.
There was no local anesthetic offered at that time. The first
five pieces of flesh were not that bad, but I started the
count down for the last five. At the end of the biopsy, I
walked out and was able to have a smile on my face. The results
came back negative and I was told it would be a waiting and
watching for any changes.
I had four biopsies over an eight year period. My PSA went
up every two years, from 7, 11, and 17 to 26. It was the last
biopsy that showed there was cancer in one of the lobes of
the prostate gland. My Gleason count was 8.
On my second visit for a biopsy, I was lying on the exam table,
face to the wall, and Dr. Wiseman said he thought he recognized
me. I said I hope it was not from the end he was viewing.
He said no, I saw your face when you came in.
There are over one million hits on the internet for prostate
cancer. I have looked at a lot of them. One of the articles
I read stated if one hundred men were diagnosed with prostate
cancer, and they did nothing for prevention, eighty would
die with prostate cancer and twenty would die because of it.
I told this to my urologist Dr. Metcalfe, he said unfortunately
you are in the twenty men that would die without treatment.
With a PSA of 26 and a Gleason of 8, my options for treatment
were limited. The two options that were recommended to me
was surgery or radiation.
It was decision time.
The two
options that were recommended are the ones I least wanted.
I preferred the radiation seed implants referred to as Brachy
Therapy or the freezing referred to as Cryo Therapy.
After looking at radiation and surgery, I elected for surgery
because I was told it was very difficult to do surgery after
radiation as the prostate gland turns into scar tissue.
Radical Prostatectomy:
After checking into the Rocky View Hospital, I was led to
a change room and told to put on a “back end open”
housecoat. They put me in a reclining chair with warm blankets
and asked me to wait.
At the appropriate time I was led down a long corridor into
the operating room. Dr. Metcalfe said if I wanted to bolt,
now was the time. I smiled and climbed up on the table. I
was told to sit up, bend over, bend my knees and grab my legs.
That’s the last thing I remember until a nurse asked
me if I could move my toes.
They placed me on the hospital bed with I Vs in my arm and
the unforgettable catheter plugged in for hands free use.
The scrub nurse came and said she had to wash me. I said I
had a shower this morning so it was not necessary. She used
a damp cloth and wiped my leg, it was a bright orange colour.
She then lifted up the blankets and my fancy nightshirt and
proceeded to scrub the disinfectant off my shy body.
Two months later I arrived at the hospital to visit a friend
that had the same surgery. The same nurse was about to scrub
him down. I told her she had done the same thing to me earlier.
She quickly replied in her Scottish accent that she did not
recognize me with me clothes on.
The treatment the nurses and staff gave at the Rocky View
was first class. The one thing that surprised me, there was
NO PAIN from the operation. My throat was a little sore from
the tube they inserted during the operation.
Every time the nurses came to the room they asked if I had
passed gas. They said this was the only section of the hospital
they cheered when a patient passed gas. I got my cheer on
the second day!
My grand daughter was born in the same hospital while I was
recovering. I went down to see her for the first time pushing
the IV and catheter holder and wearing a new housecoat. I
had my picture taken holding the precious bundle. She will
wonder in years to come why grandpa had his housecoat on.
The two concerns I had were incontinence and erectile dysfunction.
They gave us an exercise for the first problem. I can proudly
say I have control of my bladder. The second problem, we started
working on “it”, but it has been interrupted by
Hormone Therapy.
On the tenth day after surgery I went to Dr. Metcalfe’s
office to have the catheter removed. He had a very young female
urologist observing him with patients. He asked me to lie
on the table and he would remove the tube on the count of
three. This should have been a warning. It felt like the tube
was attached to my knee.
It was about two months after surgery I was able to go golfing.
I enjoyed the game even with the high score.
Three
months following surgery my PSA was virtually non-detectable
0.01. The doctor said they did biopsies on the surrounding
lymph nodes and the results were negative.
What a relief, I thought we had beaten the big “C”.
I was sent for PSA testing every three months for the next
year. The results were very low 0.1 and 0.3 and the fourth
test showed 0.4. No big deal I thought!
Dr. Metcalfe said the PSA should not be rising with the prostate
removed. He referred me back to Dr. Husain at the Tom Baker
Center.
It was recommended that I consider Hormone Therapy and I volunteered
for a case study. They randomly selected the patients for
a six-month or a two-year study. I was selected for the two-year
study and told how lucky I was.
At the same time I signed up for a study with the University
of Calgary about physical activity of cancer patients on Hormone
Therapy.
The best part of the Hormone injection is the fuel cost we
have saved over this past winter. I never knew what a “Hot
Flush” was before. Just ask me now. The size of the
needle they use to inject the time release tablet seems larger
then the big knitting needles. I was told each injection was
worth $1,400.00 and paid for by the Cancer Clinic.
Being in two case studies has given more attention to my problem
then just a patient to a doctor. I should have the final results
from the U of C study by September showing how I ranked with
the other old farts during the physical activities.
External
Beam Radiation:
Three months after Hormone Therapy, they scheduled me for
radiation. They did an ultra sound and placed three little
tattoos on my body for the laser beam on the radiation machine
to lock onto.
I was told 25% of the patients have no problems with side
effects, 50% have a few side effects and the other 25% have
several problems.
Thirty-nine treatments were scheduled for every morning except
Saturday and Sunday. The procedure was fast and very simple.
A friend at the gym where I have a workout each week day morning
asked me what they do. I said you go into the radiation room
with two or three young ladies and they ask you to take your
pants off and get on the bed. He replied, “It could
only happen in America”.
Each treatment took about ten minutes from the time you went
into the room until you were walking outside.
Side effects were minimal. My bowls became very active with
an abundance of gas. I had the urge to go to the bathroom,
mostly gas but sometimes there was the one percent substance.
You did not want to take a chance on any surprises so you
always sat down to do the job.
The last
two weeks of treatment, I began to get tired in the afternoons.
A fifteen-minute power nap was all that I needed. I asked
the girls if they knew how the treatments were going and if
they were doing any good. I was told they did not know and
would only find out when treatments were complete and the
results were checked. My last PSA showed 0.02 and I was told
to come back in six months.
I requested the Hormone injections stop after one year because
the flushes were very intense and woke me up six to seven
times each night. January was my last injection and I was
told it would take until November for the estrogen to dissipate
from my body.
When the hormones and testosterone are back to normal, I will
then start working on problem # 2.
I feel very pleased with the treatment I have received from
all departments that treat cancer. Not once did I feel I was
getting second-class treatment. My sons wanted me to go to
the Mayo Clinic in Arizona. We arranged an appointment but
I ended up staying in Calgary because I truly feel we have
world-class facilities for cancer treatment in our own back
yard.
Volunteering
at the Prostate Cancer Clinic:
I felt I had to give something back because of the treatment
I had received.
I now volunteer each Tuesday morning from 8:30 until noon.
I talk with the patients that come in for a biopsy. Some of
these men are very nervous and have only a vague idea of what
is taking place. Men in general, do not like to talk about
things that affect their “Man-hood”.
It gives me great pleasure talking with these men and their
wives and answering questions they felt uncomfortable asking.
I always start the conversation by telling them I am a volunteer
and I have had four biopsies in the past. All without a local
anesthetic!
I can’t give you advice, but I can tell you my experiences.
I invite them to come to the resource center to ask questions
and check out books.
I tell them the more information you have, the easier it will
be to make a decision about treatment if it is required.
I wish them good luck and tell them it will most likely be
a “Watch and Wait” situation.
Gil Carlson
Cancer Survivor, age 68
_________________________________________________________________
Get Your Ass Down There- by
Vic Germaniuk
This commentary is based around my own personal journey with
prostate cancer.
Of the number of priorities that I have learned since the
disease, this would be the utmost.If you care about yourself
and others who are in your life, get your ass down to the
doctor and have regular check ups.
Having gone through this now, I think the most bazaar part
about having prostate cancer is feeling so good and physically
fit. I am slim, I happen to be a hard working guy who actually
enjoys work, I do not smoke, 36 years as a vegetarian, I haven't
drank coffee in about thirty years, my alcohol intake amounts
to about four bottles of beer per year. I am quite am active
cyclist, kayaker, cross country skier, climber and hiker,
snowshoer, and love to do landscaping where I can push boulders
around for hours. After working the usual nine or ten hour
day in my woodworking shop, I would have my typical large
supper and continue to cycle or canoe until dark. I felt so
good that I could hardly wait to do it again the next day
and the next. But what I didn't know was that my prostate
was slowly being eaten away by cancer, while I felt so strong
and healthy. How could this be, you ask? Wake brothers, this
is cancer.
When a man contracts this disease and does not get regular
check ups, he will go on with his usual routine for many years
feeling quite healthy, happy and content, thinking that life
is so wonderful. One day he wakes up and there are signs of
fatigue, sluggishness and maybe blood in the urine. At that
point the chances are great that the cancer may have spread
too far and his life may be over very shortly.
By taking an apathetic approach to regular medical checks-ups,
seems to me like a sort of death wish suicide mission that
some people are on. Do they care so little about themselves,
their family and their friends that they would sooner die?
For days I watched my dad die slowly with prostate cancer,
yelling and screaming for help while writhing in pain because
the cancer had advanced beyond the strongest drug available
to relieve his agony.He did not believe in regular check-ups
and that was his choice. If I could have asked him whether
he had made the right choice, I can only guess what his response
would have been.
Early detection for prostate cancer most likely means living
another twenty, thirty or forty more good healthy years. If
you wish, you can choose to die early and perhaps experience
what I witnessed with my dad, but really, if you saw what
I did, I think you would change your mind. You have choices.
Which one will you choose? One man in seven will get this
disease. Think about that for a moment would you? Count how
many men you know. It might be twenty-five, thirty-five, or
forty. Five or six of them will get prostate cancer. Will
it be you? It might be, but, with early detection the recovery
may hardly be an issue and you could live on to be a healthy
and strong senior watching your grandchildren grow and finally
marry.
If I'm scarring you, GOOD. This is my intent. Make an appointment
with your doctor right away. Have your prostate checked and
your blood work done. In other words, GET YOUR ASS DOWN THERE.
__________________________________________________________________
My Prostate Cancer Story -
by
Keith Brown
I had
34 radiation treatments at the Baker Clinic for Prostate Cancer
in Calgary in 1993 but my PSA kept rising during the next
4 years to around 22 by the summer of 1997. I became concerned
and contacted 3 urologists who all prescirbed watchful waiting.
I was told that I did not qualify for the Cryo study because
my PSA was over the prescribed limit of 20; an indication
to him that the cancer had probably spread to the lymph nodes.
I did not wish to wait until serious complications became
evident. When this occurs, no further radiation can be given
safely, and hormone treatments are the only alternative. These
may or may not complete effective and could only last 3 or
4 years. I hear of Dr. Grado at the Radiation Clinic in Scottsdale
and contacted him for more info. He and Dr. Ragde at the Northwest
Tumor Institute in Seattle helped advance this procedure.
I made
my appoitment for January 13, 1998 in Seattle. Dr. Rage's
office sent me a brochure covering the operation, along with
appointments for a biopsy and pre-exam. I would not have qualified
if my cancer had spread beyond the prostate.
The operation
involves a spinal or general anesthetic. In my case 100 radioactive
seeds wre inplanted in the prostate. After a two hour recovery
period I had an x-ray and catscan to be sure the seeds had
not moved. The procedure was painless, but urinating for the
next few days was a bit painful and some blood was passed.
I was walking 2 days later, but I was a bit weak. The radiation
from the seeds lasts for about a year.
The Seattle
facilities and staff were very professional. Brachy was done
in the early 1900's but the equipment and technique was not
satisfactory. Ultrasound and hig-tech, needles, etc have advanced
this procedure with top techniques. The results how an excellent
success rate. Brachytheray is now available in many sites
across Canada, including Calgary's Tom Baker Cancer Centre.
9 years
passed after my brachy treatment before my PSA started to
edge upward to 5.2. My urologist had determined that I should
'watchful wait" for a year with PSA tests every 3 months.
After two tests my PSA has risen to 6.2 but until it reaches
10 my urologist will not suggest further treatment. Hormone
therapy will probably be the next resort, but at age 82, it
would no doubt disturb my quality of life. I am excercising
daily and trying to eat and drink properly to help stablize
my condition.
If you
would like to contact me please email me at prostaidcalgary@shaw.ca
___________________________________________________________________
One
Man's Story
- by Bob Shiell
My
journey with prostate cancer started about 12 years ago with
a phone call from my father. At age 75 he had been diagnosed
with metastasis prostate cancer. I had just turned 50. My
knowledge of prostate cancer was very limited. I called our
family doctor who filled me in with information about what
to expect with my father and also suggested that I start regular
psa testing. I soon started getting regular dres and
psa tests. My father went on to hormonal therapy and lived
another 4 years, ultimately dying of a heart attack.
During
this period every time I went for a test I heard "everythings
normal". When I was 55 my psa came back at 3.6 and I
was sent to an urologist. Again, "everythings normal
- come back next year." The following year my psa climbed
to 5.6 and a subsequent biopsy gave me a Gleason score of
6, and six positive core samples out of 6 taken. I had prostate
cancer!
My urologist
told me that surgery was my best option, but because of the
extent of the cancer and the good possibility of it having
spread outside the capsule, he would have to be aggressive
in his surgery. He assured me I would most likely be impotent,
and possibly suffer from incontinence. Radiation was also
mentioned as a secondary treatment if the surgery failed.
Needless to say I was in shock! I was 56 and I had thought,
healthy. My routine for over 8 years was to swim a mile a
day, watch what I eat and drink and not smoke. I had no symptoms
and felt great. But suddenly I felt like my life was over.
After
getting over the initial shock I decided to be equally aggressive
in my search for treatment options. I went first to the library.
Remember, this was almost six years ago. The books I found
were not very helpful. Most dealt with surgery the
operation, recovery, living with side effects, etc. While
I was doing research I sent copies of my biopsy slides to
Memorial Sloan Kettering Hospital in New York for a second
opinion. I also sought out and had an appointment with another
urologist in another city. The internet provided me with links
to other treatments, to survivors, and prostate cancer specialists.
To make a long story short I finally linked up with Dr. Haakon
Ragde in Seattle, Washington. His recommendation was three-fold.
A 4 month course of hormones (Zoladex and Flutamide), 25 sessions
of external beam radiation and finally brachytherapy
the insertion of tiny radioactive seeds directly into the
prostate gland under ultrasound guidance.
I went
with his recommendations. The hormonal therapy and external
beam radiation was provided by the caring staff at Tom Baker
Cancer Centre in Calgary. As brachy was not yet available
in Canada I had that procedure done in Seattle. I finished
my treatment in December, 1997.
Now over seven years out and my psa is stable at 0.1. My quality
of life is excellent. Knowing what I know now, would I do
it again? Absolutely. But I also recognize that my choice
of treatment, while right for me, is not necessarily right
for others.
Since
my diagnosis I have become very active in the prostate cancer
support community. I took over as President of PCCN Calgary
(the local support group) 4 years ago and in January 2003
became President of the Prostate Cancer Canada Network.
Prostate
Cancer support groups fulfill an important role. They are
there when the newly diagnosed need someone to talk too right
now! They can also provide up-to-date information on various
treatment modalities. Many groups regularly feature medical
guest speakers at monthly meetings to keep members informed.
Building awareness for early detection and advocating for
treatment options are also important functions of the groups.
PCCN Calgarys mission statement says it all: "Our
objective is to assist and support patients, families and
friends as they deal with prostate cancer. We inform, empathize
and reassure men on their journey. We share our experiences
with our own cancer, lift our spirits and strengthen our resolve
to fight for quality of life and a cure."
PCCN is
the national organization representing some 120 independent
support groups across the country. PCCN speaks for tens of
thousands of men suffering from prostate cancer to government
and business. PCCN builds awareness through projects like
"Living Proof" a national awareness campaign
featuring prostate cancer survivors and a soon to be released
national television campaign featuring Red Green.
What can be done to help in the battle with prostate cancer?
If youre a man over 50 or over 40 with a family history
of cancer, talk to your doctor about getting tested. Watch
your diet and exercise regularly. If you have already been
diagnosed, get in touch with your local support group. Our
web site at www.prostatecancer.ca.
is a good source of links and information about prostate cancer
and provides contact information to groups across the country.
One in
three Canadians will experience cancer. In my family, my father
had prostate cancer, my mother died with ovarian cancer, and
my wife was diagnosed and successfully treated for breast
cancer 6 months after my initial prostate cancer diagnosis.
Having faced cancer, and at least for the time being having
beaten it, I now have a much greater appreciation for each
day. I firmly believe that maintaining a positive attitude
and helping others along their journey goes a long way to
a successful recovery.
Please consider submitting the story of YOUR journey with
prostate cancer to the Prostaid website. It is through sharing
our experiences that we can learn from one another. Please submit
your story to info@pccncalgary.org |