Hi-Risk/Recurrent/Advanced PCa Video Chat, Dec 18, 2023

Hi-Risk/Recurrent/Advanced PCa Video Chat, Dec 18, 2023

Hi-Risk/Recurrent/Advanced PCa Video Chat, Dec 18, 2023

Once a year in December, AnCan Foundation comes to you for a donation to support our largely volunteer programs. If you’re signed up to get meeting reminders, you’ll also have seen our Annual Fundraising Letter, sent last week. If you value our recordings, please consider making a donation at https://ancan.org/donate/

AnCan is grateful to the following sponsors for making this recording possible: Bayer, Foundation Medicine, Pfizer, Janssen, Myriad Genetics, Myovant, Telix & Blue Earth Diagnostics.

Recent Webinar Recording & Sides – Let’s talk Medicare 2024! 

AnCan respectfully notes that it does not accept sponsored promotion. Any drugs, protocols or devices recommended in our discussions are based solely on anecdotal peer experience or clinical evidence.

AnCan cannot and does not provide medical advice. We encourage you to discuss anything you hear in our sessions with your own medical team.

AnCan reminds all Participants that Adverse Events experienced from prescribed drugs or protocols should be reported to the pharmaceutical manufacturer or the FDA Adverse Event Reporting System (FAERS). To do so call 1-800-332-1066 or download interactive FDA Form 3500 https://www.fda.gov/media/76299/download

Buy AnCan Holiday swag at https://ancan.org/shop/ …. T-shirts and sweatshirts!

AnCan’s Prostate Cancer Forum is back (https://ancan.org/forums). If you’d like to comment on anything you see in our Recordings or read in our Reminders, just sign up and go right ahead. You can also click on the Forum icon at the top right of the webpage.

All AnCan’s groups are free and drop-in … join us in person sometime! You can find out more about our 12 monthly prostate cancer meetings at https://ancan.org/prostate-cancer/          Sign up to receive a weekly Reminder/Newsletter for this Group or others at https://ancan.org/contact-us/

Join our other free and drop in groups: Men (Only) Speaking Freely…1st & 3rd Thursdays @ 8.00 pm Eastern https://ancan.org/men-speaking-freely/       Veterans Healthcare Navigation… 4th Thursday @ 8.00 pm Eastern https://ancan.org/veterans/

Editor’s Picks: Wrapping up (literally) a scary episode of lymphedema; after bladder complications, every step he takes could mean a hospital visit. (bn)

Topics Discussed

Specialized therapists bring his lymphedema under control; surprise prostate recurrence after high-dose brachytherapy; waiting for pain to fade after radiation for rectal tumor; runaway diarrhea with no intestinal bug in sight — was it Keytruda?; PSA inching up but PSMA PET draws a blank; after radiation to bladder, every step risks a hospital visit; doctors who turn their back on complications; parting ways with a medonc who won’t do doublet; adrenal glands won’t restart after long-term abiraterone

Chat Log

Ravi Subramaniam · 8:54 PM
sucralfate enema for radiation proctitis

Unknown · 9:01 PM
Psyllium is often helpful

Peter Kafka – Maui · 9:43 PM
Peter Kafka – peterk@ancan.org

Ravi Subramaniam · 9:44 PM
RaviS58@outlook.com

Unknown · 9:58 PM
Psyllium helps with diarrhea

Unknown · 9:59 PM
Psyllium can make constipation worse

Frank Fabish Columbus OH · 10:00 PM
Thanks guys. Catch you next week.

Thomas Matica WA · 10:03 PM
Psyllium also helps reduce blood glucose levels.

Thomas Matica WA · 10:05 PM
Great sesion. Thanks to all.

Hi-Risk/Recurrent/Advanced PCa Video Chat, Dec 18, 2023

Hi-Risk/Recurrent/Advanced PCa Video Chat, Dec 12, 2023

Hi-Risk/Recurrent/Advanced PCa Video Chat, Dec 12, 2023

Once a year in December, AnCan Foundation comes to you for a donation to support our largely volunteer programs. If you’re signed up to get meeting reminders, you’ll also have seen our Annual Fundraising Letter, sent last week. If you value our recordings, please consider making a donation at https://ancan.org/donate/

AnCan is grateful to the following sponsors for making this recording possible: Bayer, Foundation Medicine, Pfizer, Janssen, Myriad Genetics, Myovant, Telix & Blue Earth Diagnostics.

Recent Webinar Recording & Sides – Let’s talk Medicare 2024! 

AnCan respectfully notes that it does not accept sponsored promotion. Any drugs, protocols or devices recommended in our discussions are based solely on anecdotal peer experience or clinical evidence.

AnCan cannot and does not provide medical advice. We encourage you to discuss anything you hear in our sessions with your own medical team.

AnCan reminds all Participants that Adverse Events experienced from prescribed drugs or protocols should be reported to the pharmaceutical manufacturer or the FDA Adverse Event Reporting System (FAERS). To do so call 1-800-332-1066 or download interactive FDA Form 3500 https://www.fda.gov/media/76299/download

Buy AnCan Holiday swag at https://ancan.org/shop/ …. T-shirts and sweatshirts!

AnCan’s Prostate Cancer Forum is back (https://ancan.org/forums). If you’d like to comment on anything you see in our Recordings or read in our Reminders, just sign up and go right ahead. You can also click on the Forum icon at the top right of the webpage.

All AnCan’s groups are free and drop-in … join us in person sometime! You can find out more about our 12 monthly prostate cancer meetings at https://ancan.org/prostate-cancer/          Sign up to receive a weekly Reminder/Newsletter for this Group or others at https://ancan.org/contact-us/

Join our other free and drop in groups: Men (Only) Speaking Freely…1st & 3rd Thursdays @ 8.00 pm Eastern https://ancan.org/men-speaking-freely/       Veterans Healthcare Navigation… 4th Thursday @ 8.00 pm Eastern https://ancan.org/veterans/

Editors Pick: Boosting testosterone, feeling great — and dancing with the devil? (bn) 

Topics Discussed

Insist on Orgovyx and darolutamide, or accept old standbys Lupron and Casodex?; diplomatically swapping out a urologist for an oncologist; who’s afraid of a little testosterone boost?; itching back and constipation on ADT — is it just me?; find a trainer — not a physical therapist; PSMA PET sticker shock; AnCan website needs new blood; what’s with the protons — and why not surgery?

Chat Log

David M · 6:20 PM
EVEN A SMALL DONATION is much appreciated. Your volunteers work hard for for you and all of us thet deeply depend on Ancan. THANK YOU

Julian – Houston · 6:36 PM
FYI – Bayer US Patient Assistance Foundation, 1-866-228-7723

Jim Marshall, Alexandria, VA · 6:51 PM
In my kaiser, Lupron/Eligard/orgpvyx is Urology’s turf and 2nd level drugs are in Oncology. jim

AnCan – rick · 7:18 PM
ACSM search tool http://certification2.acsm.org/profinder

AnCan – rick · 7:19 PM
Carol Michaels Fitness http://www.carolmichaelsfitness.com/

AnCan – rick · 7:24 PM
Smooth Move Tea laxative

Alan Babcock · 7:25 PM
I have another meeting at 7:30.

AnCan – rick · 7:33 PM
Jimmy Greenfield interview https://ancan.org/solo-arts-heal-with-jimmy-greenfield/

Jim Marshall, Alexandria, VA · 7:38 PM
If you were a Vet, one can claim “Loss of Use of Creative Organ” and collect $128.62 per month. That is how much your are worth in the boudoir.

Jay Newman · 7:48 PM
Does anybody know about the effectiveness of the Ember Wave and where I can get one?

Frank Fabish Columbus OH · 8:12 PM
got to go thanks

Julian – Houston · 8:14 PM
Thanks all, need to go.

AnCan – rick · 8:18 PM
Got to go. Thanks guys. … from Frank F

AnCan’s fave, Lindsey Byrne teams with JnJ to explain BRCA!

AnCan’s fave, Lindsey Byrne teams with JnJ to explain BRCA!

For those that have been around AnCan for a while, the name Lindsey Byrne should be familiar. Lindsey is a Genetic Counselor at The Ohio State University (James) Comprehensive Cancer Center who specializes in prostate cancer. Click this link, and you’ll see everything she has done with AnCan!

Lindsey recently participated with Janssen Biotech, soon to be referred to as just Johnson & Johnson (JnJ), to make 3 short videos on the implications of the BRCA gene mutation for prostate cancer. This is part of a non-branded education effort as JnJ introduces its newly approved single pill, AKEEGA, that combines PARP-Inhibitor niraparib with ARSI, abiraterone acetate. Lindsey doesn’t just talk the talk; she walks the walk – ask her patient, frequent AnCan participant, Frank Fabish pictured together right. AnCan, btw, is also indirectly connected to panelist GU med onc Cora Sternberg, who went to grade school with one of our gents, and was a good family friend of another.

If the video seems a little stiff, that’s because it has to be fully scripted to meet FDA requirements for the manufacturers. That said, the information is good, understandable and accurate – although it may leave out important additional information AnCan would impart. So if you know very little about BRCA, and want to understand it better, we recommend watching these 3 short videos that you can do in les than 20 minutes. Click https://www.uncoverbrca.com/expert-video-series/index.html

Two short caveats:

  • even if you don’t have prostate cancer, but your condition has a risk for BRCA mutations, the videos may be helpful. PARP-Inhibitors alone are often a treatment option when BRCA is present in any cancer.
  • in full disclosure, JnJ is a significant AnCan financial sponsor. However, JnJ neither requested nor required us to promote these videos.
Bang your drum… it could make you smarter and healthier!

Bang your drum… it could make you smarter and healthier!

Bang your drum… it could make you smarter and healthier!

 

I don’t want to work
I want to bang on the drum all day
I don’t want to play
I just want to bang on the drum all day
Todd Rundgren

 

Twice in the last several months, the topic of drumming came up in our  AnCan Men Speaking Freely group and it generated some excitement both times. So this month’s invite will be on that topic.In my former practice whenever I have given a non-verbal treatment there is a big relief that no talking is involved. In bypassing the verbal and left-brain systems we gain access to a typically unused part of ourselves. I wonder if we can use this approach to cope with our serious illnesses and have a better life?

Our brains have a characteristic called plasticity, the ability to change. You may have heard of this regarding the little finger brain circuit of violinists; it grows as they become proficient. Drummers also have different brains than the rest of us. They have fewer, thicker nerve fibers between the two halves of the brain. They have more efficiently organized motor cortices. (Schlaffke, 2019). Because of this, drummers can do things that we can’t. They can coordinate the two sides of the brain better, and perform motor tasks with greater efficiency. They can play different rhythms with each hand and foot at the same time.

Schlaffke’s subjects had drummed many hours per week for decades. But Bruchhage’s (2020) subjects trained for only 8 weeks and showed several changes in the cerebellum plus changes in the cortex, showing not only cerebellar plasticity but also communication and coordination between the cerebellum and brain sensorimotor areas as well as areas for cognitive control.

Drumming is very complicated, which is why it’s unfair that the lead guitar and vocal guy gets all the girls (Greenfield, J. 2022).

For some reason, there is a close association between beat synchronization (integrating auditory perception with motor activity) and reading ability in children (Bonacina, 2021). Higher synchronization ability predicts better literacy skills. Maybe early intervention involving drumming can improve literacy in kids?

Cahart et.al (2022) showed that drumming can improve behavioral outcomes for autistic adolescents and elucidated some of the neurology involved. Does this mean it could help us?

Drums have been used for millennia for healing, inducing trance, and even psyching up soldiers.

We have learned that drumming is not just about waking up the right brain, but also about connecting the sides of the brain, and the cerebellum with the cortex. It can induce alpha brain waves. It can release endorphins. Even T-cells respond to drumming (Bittman). It induces present-moment experience, which we often work toward to deal with death anxiety. Interpersonal connections are made when people drum together. Despite the effort involved, it induces relaxation. I have come across papers describing drumming and music therapy for a wide variety of emotional problems and currently, there are 8000 music therapists in the US.

How about for us?  We see above the possibility of reductions in anxiety, tension, pain, isolation, depression, and over-thinking the past and future. There are many studies of music therapy in ICUs, with patients on ventilators, easing hemodialysis pain, with positive results. Also, helpful with narcotic use, social integration, and depression. MSKCC uses music therapy.

With terminal cancer, there is data showing that music helps breathing, QOL, psychospiritual integration, reducing pain in chemotherapy, radiation, and helps pediatric breast and lung Ca patients (Ramirez 2018, Hilliard 2003, Burns 2015 Tuinmann 2017, Barrera 2002, Li 2011, Lin 2011). Atkinson (2020) found improvement with fatigue. I couldn’t find any studies focused only on Prostate Cancer.

Well, all this scholarly stuff is really unnecessary to anyone who ever banged a pot with a wooden spoon. Kids love it. Adults love situations where it’s OK to be wild and make noise, such as drumming circles and Pound classes. It’s just fun and feels good.

Dr. John Antonucci
Editor: Dr. John wrote this for our Men Speaking Freely Reminder on Dec 7, 2023. It’s such a perceptive, helpful and instructive piece, AnCan wanted to share it widely.
Hi-Risk/Recurrent/Advanced PCa Video Chat, Dec 18, 2023

Hi-Risk/Recurrent/Advanced PCa Video Chat, Dec 4, 2023

Hi-Risk/Recurrent/Advanced PCa Video Chat, Dec 4, 2023

AnCan is grateful to the following sponsors for making this recording possible: Bayer, Foundation Medicine, Pfizer, Janssen, Myriad Genetics, Myovant, Telix & Blue Earth Diagnostics.

Recent Webinar Recording & Sides – Let’s talk Medicare 2024! 

AnCan respectfully notes that it does not accept sponsored promotion. Any drugs, protocols or devices recommended in our discussions are based solely on anecdotal peer experience or clinical evidence.

AnCan cannot and does not provide medical advice. We encourage you to discuss anything you hear in our sessions with your own medical team.

AnCan reminds all Participants that Adverse Events experienced from prescribed drugs or protocols should be reported to the pharmaceutical manufacturer or the FDA Adverse Event Reporting System (FAERS). To do so call 1-800-332-1066 or download interactive FDA Form 3500 https://www.fda.gov/media/76299/download

Buy AnCan Holiday swag at https://ancan.org/shop/ …. T-shirts and sweatshirts!

AnCan’s Prostate Cancer Forum is back (https://ancan.org/forums). If you’d like to comment on anything you see in our Recordings or read in our Reminders, just sign up and go right ahead. You can also click on the Forum icon at the top right of the webpage.

All AnCan’s groups are free and drop-in … join us in person sometime! You can find out more about our 12 monthly prostate cancer meetings at https://ancan.org/prostate-cancer/          Sign up to receive a weekly Reminder/Newsletter for this Group or others at https://ancan.org/contact-us/

Join our other free and drop in groups: Men (Only) Speaking Freely…1st & 3rd Thursdays @ 8.00 pm Eastern https://ancan.org/men-speaking-freely/       Veterans Healthcare Navigation… 4th Thursday @ 8.00 pm Eastern https://ancan.org/veterans/

Editor’s Pick: Take a trip with ketamine!! + lotsa useful tips this week. (rd)

Topics Discussed

Only ONE QB, and make sure they are the best choice; out-of-touch rad onc; Keytruda fails – moving on to Pluvicto; ketamine provides remarkable insight BUT don’t overdo it; Mettle Health & BJ Miller; community med onc doesn’t provide standard of care; is a PCa collective voice feasible?… old hands think not!; name the doc you want to see via your provider portal; renal cysts are rarely malignant; use FMI’s mobile phlebotomist to save time; how YOU can load images to MyChart; what to do about ADT fatigue… possibly over exercising??; is PSA too low for liquid biopsy analysis when you have known mets?; hotel deals available for cancer treatment.

Chat Log

  • AnCan – ricksent · 6:33 PM
    ketamine therapy for anxiety
  • sent · 6:34 PM
    Ketamine is also used for depression
  • AnCan – ricksent · 6:39 PM
    Mettle Health Dr. BJ Miller https://mettlehealth.com
  • AnCan – ricksent · 6:42 PM
    dr.bob@ancan.org
  • AnCan – ricksent · 6:56 PM
  • Jerry Grimes – Brighton, MIsent · 6:59 PM
    Thanks all, gotta run to another meeting.
  • Len Sierrasent · 6:59 PM
    Anti androgens: abiraterone, enzalutamide, apalutamide, darolutamide
  • Bob Gsent · 7:02 PM
    Have to go now. I’ll be back a lot sooner. Have a good night.
  • Jim Marshall, Alexandria, VAsent · 7:10 PM
    DOD’s Center for Prostate Disease Research gets $110M per year for Prostate Research. They hire contractors to analyze the proposals and do not go outside their own sphere. Jim Marshall
  • AnCan – ricksent · 7:18 PM
  • Julian – Houstonsent · 7:30 PM
    brings back memories!
  • TonyFigsent · 7:40 PM
    Foundation Medicine

    https://www.foundationmedicine.com/contact +1 (888) 988-3639

  • Julian – Houstonsent · 7:43 PM
    Phone +1 (888) 988-3639 Email: client.services@foundationmedicine.com Online Ordering Portal home.foundationmedicine.com/login Fax +1 (617) 418-2290
  • Frank Fabish Columbus OHsent · 7:50 PM
    Got to go. Thanks guys. see you next week,
  • Peter Kafka – Mauisent · 7:51 PM
    I am resigned to the belief that I might have to settle for the “Special Olympics” next year.
  • Jim Marshall, Alexandria, VAsent · 7:54 PM
    Am in my 70s. There is old age to consider. The mind may be 55 but my body is 79. Old age is a factor. So there is a conflict. Jim
  • Fred Maticasent · 8:04 PM
    Thank you all for your advice and encouragement. Good Night.

    Fred Thomas Matica

  • AnCan – ricksent · 8:11 PM
    Extended Stay Hotels