Things You'll Need:
- A copy of your medical record.
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Step 1
Obtain your complete medical record. Don’t depend on your memory, or notes jotted down at the doctor’s office. The record belongs to you—just ask for it. You may have to pay a small processing fee, but it’s well worth it.
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Step 2
From your biopsy pathology report, write down your Gleason score, how many cores were taken, and how many were positive for cancer out of the total. You will also need your PSA and clinical stage. If your clinical stage was not given, you can figure this out yourself—if the cancer was found by biopsy triggered by elevated PSA only (the doctor doesn’t feel it), it’s T1c. If the doctor can palpate (feel) the cancer upon rectal exam, it’s T2, etc. See the additional resources section of this article for more information on staging.
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Step 3
Go to Uropredict on the Bostwick Laboratories website. Put in the required information, which includes whether or not the cancer was unifocal (found in only one spot). Click on “Run Uropredict”. You will see probabilities of organ-confined disease, extra-prostatic extension, and seminal vesicle involvement.
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Step 4
Go to the Johns Hopkins website and run the Partin and Han tables. The Partin tables predict the probability that your cancer has spread, while the Han tables predict the likelihood of a recurrence after surgery, should you decide on prostatectomy.
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Step 5
Go to the nomograms page on the Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center website. Use the Pre-Treatment Prediction Tool.
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Step 6
To understand all of this in context, buy a copy of “Dr. Patrick Walsh’s Guide to Surviving Prostate Cancer”, 2007 edition (see "Resources" at the bottom of this page.) Keep in mind that you are an individual, not a statistic. The above tools do not predict the outcome for an individual with certainty, but rather provide a rough estimate upon which to plan a course of action.
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Step 7
Take the information you have uncovered, along with your questions, to your doctor.












Comments
bellerose said
on 8/28/2009 This is really great info. It's always best to learn about available treatments and outcomes before you have to decide on one, and there seems to be quite a lot easily available for this condition. 5*