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What I would do
An Interview with Dr. Bradley Hennenfent by
Richard Steele
Noted authority Dr. Brad Hennenfent, author of the
book "Surviving
Prostate Cancer Without Surgery," shares his thoughts on what
he would do if he had prostate cancer.
1. "Watchful Waiting"
" Watchful waiting" means watching your prostate cancer until it causes
symptoms - if it ever does - and then treating the symptoms. This is differentiated
from the practice of some doctors who advocate treatments that immediately decrease
the quality of a man's life. Oftentimes, these doctors prescribe a treatment
that is worse than the disease.
"
Watchful waiting" is a viable option because most prostate
cancer is small and slow-gathering. The fact is that a majority
of men with prostate cancer will go on to live their lives without
ever dying from prostate cancer. They will die with prostate cancer
inside them, but not from it.
"
Watchful waiting preserves your sexuality and urinary continence," said
Dr. Hennenfent in his book. "The treatment itself does not
harm you, unless your cancer becomes symptomatic and you must
start hormone blockade or have a TURP (transurethral resection
of the prostate)."
" Always remember that the least harmful treatment
for prostate cancer, the one that interrupts
your life the least, and is appropriate if your
cancer is small and slow-growing, is watchful
waiting,"
2. Active Non-Invasive Therapy (ANIT)
The term "active non-invasive therapy" or
ANIT was coined by prostate cancer survivor Sandy
Goldman. Like many others, Sandy's
physician recommended surgery after diagnosing Sandy's prostate cancer.
But Sandy went the ANIT way: doing everything healthy and avoiding
drastic and harmful measures, while still treating prostate cancer.
ANIT means following your prostate cancer with prostate specific
antigen (PSA) tests and digital rectal exams (DREs).
ANIT means becoming an ardent student of prostate cancer by reading
books, searching the internet and joining prostate cancer groups.
It means trying to decide how to use the latest advances in predicting
the course of prostate cancer.
ANIT also means reducing stress and living a healthier lifestyle,
replete with a disciplined diet and regular exercise.
Dr. Hennenfent adds, "All men who can safely
be put on Viagra, Levitra or Cialis and want
to try one of these sex-enhancing drugs
should be started on one as part of active non-invasive therapy.
By seeing how good your sex life can be, you will think more carefully
before undergoing prostate cancer treatments that will destroy your
sexual function, and you might make better choices."
3. PC SPES (if it's available)
PC SPES is an over-the-counter combination of eight herbs: seven
Chinese herbs along with the American herb saw palmetto. PC stands
for prostate cancer and SPES is Latin for hope. Hence, PC SPES literally
means prostate cancer hope.
The book "Surviving Prostate Cancer Without Surgery" tells
of the case of Mario Mennelly, a 42-year-old utility company manager,
whose prostate specific antigen (PSA, a protein secreted by normal
and cancerous prostate cells, whose normal level is 0 or 4ug/L) rose
from 100 to 122 within six months (September 1996 to March 1997)
of being diagnosed for
cancer.
After taking nine capsules of PC SPES every day for a month, Mario's
PSA went from 122 to 11. Subsequently, he reduced his PC SPES dosage
to six capsules a day and his PSA continued to fall to 1. By 2000,
Mario's PSA was 0.2 and he intended to maintain it at that level.
However, in 2002, the United States Food & Drug
Administration had issued a warning about taking
PC SPES. The California Department
of Health found that PC SPES contained sodium warfarin, a blood thinner.
Shortly after that, BotanicLab, manufacturers of PC SPES, announced
a voluntary recall. The company has since gone out of business.
For the sake of people like Mario and countless
others out there, Dr. Hennenfent feels that the
medical profession should not give
up hope for PC SPES. He stresses a more thorough examination of the
drug and perhaps adding low-dose estrogen with a blood thinner to
the regimen."
Apparently, there are natural substances in PC
SPES that kill prostate cancer. We need to identify
and study them," said Dr. Hennenfent. "We
need to examine the entire Chinese way of medicine where several
agents are given, which are thought to act synergistically, while
in Western Medicine, typically one medicine is used."
4. Local therapies such as cryoablation, radiation seed implants,
3-D conformal radiation, intensity modulated radiation therapy, and
every other form of radiation therapy.
5. Hormone blockade
The testicles, adrenal glands and prostate all produce male hormones,
and one strategy to fight prostate cancer is to block the male hormones.
The treatment is called single, double or triple hormone blockade,
depending on how many of the three organs are blocked.
In a sense, hormone blockade produces "chemical castration" as
opposed to the old practice of " surgical castration" with
a scalpel. Obviously, the main difference is that surgical castration
cannot be reversed, while chemical castration can be stopped. It
is a critical difference. It is no secret that men usually don't
want to be castrated."
I will always consider starting hormone blockade
regardless of the stage and grade of prostate cancer
that I have, and I will be hoping
that triple hormone blockade followed by Proscar (finasteride) maintenance
or intermittent hormone blockade, will have been proved to extend
life by the time that I need them," said Dr. Hennenfelt."
In fact, I will seriously consider bypassing
PC SPES and/or estrogen and going straight
to combined hormone blockade as my first treatment,
depending on the results of studies now in progress - especially
if such studies show that increased quality-of-life survival can
be obtained by being on hormone blockade for a short time, intermittently,
or by stopping all the blockade except Proscar maintenance."
Dr. Hennenfent ends with a cautionary note:"
With so much happening with hormone blockage,
radiation therapies, cryoblation and potential
new therapies, it may be a terrible mistake
to let your prostate and seminal vesicles be ripped out during radical
surgery. Think of your quality of life as you pursue a cure for prostate
cancer."
" However, you do not have to do what I do. People
can look at the same facts and make different
decisions, and more importantly, people can
look at the same lack of facts and make different
decisions."
6. I would put my cancer in mice."One of the biggest problems
with prostate cancer," says Dr. Hennenfent, "is that doctors
try to treat everyone with the same vaccine or the same hormone blockers
or the same herbal medications. I think we need a more individualized
approach. If I was going to agressively treat prostate cancer, I
would put it in mice and let it grow. I would them use different
treatment regimens on the mice to see what worked for my cancer.""I
would also want a vaccine made, just for my cancer," adds Dr.
Hennenfent.
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