On June 29th, we hosted an exceptionally relevant webinar titled “Is Active Surveillance Safe for Black Men?”. Dr. Willie Underwood (Board Certified Urologist, Executive Director of Buffalo Center for Health Equity, and American Medical Association Board of Trustees member) and Anthony Henry (First Vice President of The Walnut Foundation) joined us for this important conversation.
Dr. Brandon Mahal was scheduled to join us, however he is actively volunteering at the Miami collapse area. Thank you Dr. Mahal for helping, and we hope to see you soon!
We want to sincerely thank Dr. Underwood and Anthony for answering questions, and providing their perspectives.
Watch this fascinating presentation here:
Special thanks to Myovant Sciences – Pfizer, Foundation Medicine, and Advanced Accelerator Applications for sponsoring this webinar.
AnCan and The Marsh (well renown, long-established theater company with a large following in the Bay Area and venues in San Francisco and Oakland) collaborateevery 4th Wednesday of the month for Solo Arts Heal! It just so happens to be the 4th Wednesday today, so be sure to check out a can’t miss SAH with The Marsh founder, Stephanie Weisman TONIGHT at 7:30 PT!
On May 26th, we had the pleasure of having Jimmy Greenfield!
Jimmy is a professional guitarist, singer and teacher from Washington, D.C. He has performed in many combinations as a soloist and bandleader in many different genres of music.
Jimmy performed jazz standards that are close to his heart. His mother exposed him to jazz daily from his earliest years. His fondest memories of her live on through these songs.
Watch this incredible performance here:
To SIGN UP for any of our AnCan Virtual Support group reminders, visit our Contact Us page.
On June 2nd, Dr. Michael Schweizer (Assistant Professor, Division of Medical Oncology University of Washington School of Medicine) spoke at our Active Surveillance Virtual Support Group with a presentation titled “Meds: A potential new path to keep men on AS?”
As a medical oncologist of the Fred Hutch Cancer Center in Seattle, he usually sees no patients on active surveillance for low- to favorable intermediate-risk prostate cancer. But this changed when he conducted a study of how apalutamide, a drug used in men with more advanced cancer, on men on AS.
Dr. Schweizer said: “My goal is to help reduce the morbidity and mortality associated with diseases like prostate cancer through developing novel drug therapies.” He plans to study the impact of other meds on men on AS to offer a new way of managing AS.
We want to thank Dr. Schweizer for answering questions!
Watch here:
To view the slides from this presentation, click here.
For information on our peer-led video chat ACTIVE SURVEILLANCE PROSTATE CANCER VIRTUAL SUPPORT GROUP, click here.
To SIGN UP for the Group or any other of our AnCan Virtual Support groups, visit our Contact Us page.
This is an important topic in a time of growing concern about equity in health care.
The program will feature Willie Underwood III, MD, a high-profile Black urologist who opted for surgery; Brandon Mahal, MD, a leading researcher on health equity issues and AS at the University of Miami; and Anthony Henry, a Black man from Toronto who has been on AS for five years and is First Vice President of the Walnut Foundation.
Richard Maye lives with Gleason 3+4 prostate cancer and participates in AnCan’s Active Surveillance and Low/Intermediate Video Chat Groups. In communications with AnCan, Richard had thoughts on how he responds to QoL issues surrounding his diagnosis, that we encouraged him to blog. (rd)
AnCan Participant Richard Maye Muses on Quality of Life
I have Prostate Cancer! Now what do I do? After receiving my diagnosis in November 2018, a month prior to turning age 71, I knew that it was imperative for me to come to terms with not only understanding this disease, but what did this mean for how I had previously viewed living out my life.
While I had talked about Quality of Life, the ideas that I included in that term were vague and general. Terms such as: Travel (where, when?); Continue to Work at least part time (doing what? for how long?); Help other People in need (Who, Where, How?); …. you get the point. I also used the term when I looked back at my Father’s end days. My Father had lung cancer and advanced metastatic prostate cancer. His end days were not filled what we would call a Quality of Life. Twenty years ago, the treatment option for his prostate cancer was chemo therapy, an option that he made clear would not be considered. I respected him all of my life including in this life decision, and watched how he lived his days with determination and without complaint.
Now, this is different, this is me. The diagnosis, while generally favorable, caused a sense of urgency for me to decide how I would live my days. Given my long-term PSA history I had researched prostate cancer, some of the treatments, side effects and related issues. I started with the question – did I believe the diagnosis? To answer this important starting point, I had a Genomic Test and also a second opinion. From there I spoke with the Urologist, Medical Oncologist, Radiation Oncologist, and two family practitioners. Research led me to the Prostate Cancer Foundation, to AnCan, UsToo and other invaluable resources. It was very important to include my wife in every step of this process. As a man of faith, I knew I had to put this in God’s hands and trust Him for guidance.
So here I was with all of this information and consultation, but it still came down to how am I going to live with this? During my administrative career as a senior administrator in healthcare to make important decisions I used this analytical process: Identify the problem; Make it a priority; Evaluate its scope; Assess the potential impact; Develop a solution; Make the decision; and, Implement it. That process is the hinge upon which the gate of my success rested.
Using that approach forced me to decide what would become my operational parameters for the term Quality of Life going forward. It ended when I told my wife and physicians that I was going to respect this cancer BUT not fear it. This means that I was not going to rush into treatment, I would go on Active Surveillance, modify my living standards but not live in fear. Here is a small example of an area included in my Quality of Life Guide. Nutrition and Diet are important to all of us no matter our health status and it plays a big role in the prevention and fighting cancer. If I want to have a piece of my grandchildren’s birthday cake, have a cocktail with our son, share a bottle of wine with my wife, I will do so and not stay awake at night wondering if I just promoted my cancer to grow. Yes, I have reduced the intake of sugar, alcohol, red meat and consumed an ocean of decaffeinated green tea, eat more vegetables than ever in my life, vigorously exercise every day and laugh.
The risk and side effects of the various treatments that are available today along with the potential for the cancer to return were weighed heavily in my decision process. Understanding the risk and consequences, I decided to wait, but wait watchfully in Active Surveilance. With regular monitoring of my PSA, I have postponed having another biopsy and glad that I did, given the trend toward using the Transperineal procedure. New diagnosis and treatments are being announced frequently.
Understandably there are men in different stages of their cancer than I, but the point is this. Define what Quality of Life means to you. Look at your life as it is currently, your life expectancy, family, career and then determine what will be your ROL (Return on Life) for the remainder of your days.
According the Social Security actuarial tables, my life expectancy is another 12 years. That’s about 4,400 days. For now, I can go about the business of living instead of being plagued by anxiety, depression and roller coaster emotions.