Dr. Morales Pinto, Stalin Fabricio
Especialista en Urología
The treatment of prostate cancer will depend on different factors: the type and stage of cancer, the patient’s general health, possible side effects, and the patient’s preference.
At HC Marbella, a multidisciplinary medical team of medical oncologists, urologists, surgeons and radiation oncologists will work together as a team to provide the treatment option that best suits the needs of each patient.
It is essential that the patient is well aware of the possible treatment options to decide, together with his team of specialists, which is the best treatment for him.
When prostate cancer is diagnosed early and its growth is slow, treatment may lead to more risks than benefits. In these cases, active surveillance may be recommended.
Active surveillance consists of careful monitoring of your cancer. Depending on the patient and the type of tumour, this involves recommended periodic follow-up consultations. During consultations, PSA values and digital rectal examination will be carried out and, if necessary, imaging tests or biopsies may be requested. If the results change, your urologist may recommend starting treatment.
Active surveillance is recommended, depending on the age of the patient, when:
Surgery for prostate cancer is radical prostatectomy (RP) and involves removing the prostate gland and some of the surrounding tissue. If the tumour has spread to the lymph nodes, they may also need to be removed.
Surgery is a treatment option when the tumour is localised and has not spread outside the prostate.
Radiotherapy uses ionising radiation to destroy the tumour. It is a non-invasive and painless treatment that achieves disease control with good results, minimising side effects
Radiotherapy with curative intent may be given:
In cases where the disease is advanced, radiotherapy may improve symptoms caused by the disease.
SpaceOAR is a gelatinous substance that is temporarily placed between the rectum and prostate in order to reduce the dose to the rectum, thus minimising possible radiotherapy-associated side effects such as proctitis, rectal bleeding or faecal incontinence.
This spacer is made of a biodegradable material that is absorbed over a period of approximately 6 months (due the process of hydrolysis) remaining intact during the first 3 months, sufficient time for treatment administration.
Today, with advances in treatment using IMRT (intensity-modulated radiotherapy) and IGRT (image-guided radiotherapy), the rate of rectal complications has decreased significantly.
However, in treatment with extreme hypofractionation (SBRT) in which the dose per fraction is very high, higher precision is needed, spacers have therefore become an indispensable tool for this treatment to prevent the high doses per session from reaching healthy organs.
Its safe application is carried out during a minimally invasive procedure, performed by trained specialists, either urologists or radiation oncologists. Generally, if the patient requires fiducial marker placement, fiducial markers and spacers are inserted during the same surgical procedure and the patient goes home on that same day, with very few side effects.
*Fiducial markers are small gold seeds that are placed, as a reference, on or around the tumour to indicate its exact position. Higher doses of radiation can therefore be delivered more accurately, without damaging nearby healthy tissue.
HC Cancer Center uses VUE Hydrogel. In addition to the advantages of conventional hydrogel this can also be visualized on CT. This enables it to be seen throughout IGRT treatment to ensure correct positioning, it also improves the quality and accuracy of contouring on the simulation CT, guaranteeing more precise and safe radiotherapy.
Hormone therapy aims to reduce levels of male hormones in the body to prevent these hormones from stimulating the growth of tumour cells.
Hormone therapy may be given:
Types of hormone therapy:
Chemotherapy is used when cancer has spread to other parts of the body and hormone therapy is no longer effective.
Tumour cells produce proteins that prevent the immune system from identifying these cells as abnormal cells and therefore prevent it from attacking them.
Immunotherapy blocks the action of these proteins and strengthens the immune system to identify and destroy these cells.
Immunotherapy is a treatment option that is currently under investigation (clinical trials) for advanced-stage prostate cancer which is no longer responding to hormone therapy.
Targeted therapy is the basis of precision medicine, this focuses on the study of genetic mutations present in the tumour to be able to deliver precise treatment targeted at the tumour rather than at healthy tissue.
In prostate cancer we use gene sequencing tests (NGS) to study for hereditary predisposition, and also to find out if there are defects in DNA repair to assess the possibility of targeted treatment with oral drugs called PARP inhibitors.
Dr. Morales Pinto, Stalin Fabricio
Especialista en Urología
Dr. Antuña Calle, Francisco Manuel
Especialista en Urología
Dr. Fernández Montero, José Manuel
Especialista en Urología
Dr. Hughes, Paul
Especialista en Urología
Dr. Rivera Sánchez, Ernesto
HC Marbella Radiology Specialist
Dr. Arrazola, Tomás
Especialista en Farmacia Hospitalaria
Especializado en terapia contra el cáncer, certificado por la Sociedad Americana de Farmacéuticos de Hospital
Dr. Villatoro Roldán, Rosa Mª
Specialist in Medical Oncology
Dr. Sedano Ferreras, Paula
Radiotherapy Oncology Specialist
Dr. García Baltar, José Antonio
Especialista en Radiofísica Hospitalaria
Sorry, this entry is only available in Español.
La importancia del chequeo urológico en los hombres, por el Dr. Stalin Morales
Sorry, this entry is only available in Español.
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