| Health Library |
![]()
|
Prostate cancer is the abnormal growth of cells in a man's prostate gland. The prostate gland is part of the reproductive system of men. It is the size and shape of a walnut. It is located below the bladder and in front of the rectum. The prostate surrounds the upper part of the urethra. (The urethra is the tube that carries urine from the bladder and through the penis.) The prostate makes the fluid that nourishes sperm and carries sperm out of the penis during orgasm.
In metastatic prostate cancer, the tumor has spread (metastasized) from the prostate gland to other parts of the body. This means that the tumor in the prostate sheds cancer cells that travel through the bloodstream and lymph system and lodge in other parts of the body (usually the bones). There they begin to grow new tumors.
The cause of prostate cancer is not known.
Metastatic prostate cancer may have no symptoms. The most common symptom of spread of prostate cancer is bone pain, especially in the lower back and pelvis.
Your healthcare provider will review your symptoms and examine you. You will have X-rays of the area where you have pain. For painful areas, bone scans or magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) may also be done to look for the spread of cancer.
The treatment for metastatic prostate cancer depends on:
Some of the treatment options, which may be used alone or in combinations, are:
How long you will live after metastatic prostate cancer is discovered depends on how much the cancer has spread, how dependent the cancer is on male hormones, and where the new tumors are. Some men have lived for years even after the cancer has spread to the bones.
As long as male hormones are reduced in the body, there will be little to no sexual function.
American Cancer Society, Inc.
Phone: 800-ACS-2345 (800-227-2345)
Web site: http://www.cancer.org
AMC Cancer Research Center and Foundation
Phone: 800-525-3777
Web site: http://www.amc.org
National Cancer Institute
Phone: 800-4-CANCER (800-422-6237)
Web sites: http://cis.nci.nih.gov and
http://www.cancer.gov
Because the cause of prostate cancer and its spread is not known, healthcare providers do not know how to prevent it. In the hope of early diagnosis leading to longer life and fewer complications, men over 50 may have a healthcare provider do an exam for prostate cancer every year. However, there is no clear evidence that early detection and treatment are helpful. Many older men have prostate cancer that never spreads and they never know that they have prostate cancer.
