Prostate Tumor Subspecialty
Published: 2025-06-27 11:20

we provide comprehensive care for the full spectrum of prostate cancer, from early detection to advanced cancer management. We specialize in the diagnosis and treatment of the following conditions:


1. Clinically Localized Prostate Cancer

Cancer confined within the prostate gland, often found through PSA testing or biopsy. Treatment options include active surveillance, robotic-assisted surgery, focal therapy or radiation therapy, based on the cancer’s risk level and patient’s preferences.


2. Locally Advanced Prostate Cancer

Cancer that has grown beyond the prostate capsule but has not spread to distant organs. Treatment may include surgery with extended lymph node removal, hormonal therapy, radiation, or a combination of approaches.


3. Biochemically Recurrent Prostate Cancer

A rising PSA level after treatment such as surgery or radiation, suggesting cancer may have returned. Management includes imaging to locate recurrence and further treatment like hormonal therapy or salvage radiotherapy.


4. Oligometastatic Prostate Cancer

Cancer that has spread to a limited number of areas (often bones or lymph nodes). Patients may benefit from targeted radiation or surgery combined with systemic therapy to control disease and delay progression.


5. Metastatic Hormonal-Sensitive Prostate Cancer (mHSPC)

Advanced prostate cancer that still responds to hormone therapy. Treatment involves androgen deprivation therapy (ADT) with additional medications like chemotherapy or novel hormone agents to improve survival.


6. Metastatic Castration-Resistant Prostate Cancer (mCRPC)

Prostate cancer that continues to grow despite hormone therapy. Advanced treatments may include second-line hormone drugs, chemotherapy, bone-targeted therapy, or clinical trials.


7. Prostate Cancer in Older or High-Risk Patients

Including patients with high surgical risk, elderly individuals, and those seeking functional preservation through focal therapy.


8. Rare Types of Prostate Cancer

Less common forms such as ductal adenocarcinoma, neuroendocrine tumors, or small cell carcinoma. These often require personalized treatment plans involving surgery, chemotherapy, and close monitoring.


Prev: Bladder Tumor Subspecialty
Next: Urinary Tract Stone Subspecialty